Seven Nights in a Rogue's Bed (43 page)

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Authors: Anna Campbell

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BOOK: Seven Nights in a Rogue's Bed
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A most bizarre burglar indeed.

“A good thief does his research first,” he said, answering the question she’d forgotten she’d asked. “Although research sometimes lets one down. For example, village gossip had it that you attended a soiree at Leighton Court tonight.”

“I wanted to…” She realized she responded as she’d respond to any polite enquiry. The hand holding the gun showed a lamentable tendency to droop, pointing the barrel harmlessly at the floor. She bit her lip and raised the gun in what she prayed was a menacing gesture. “Get out of this house.”

“But I haven’t got what I came for.”

He shifted even closer and with that movement, she felt more at risk than she had since he’d appeared. At risk as a woman was at risk to a man. She hadn’t missed how his shadowy gaze had lingered when he’d inspected her. She started to back away before she recalled any show of vulnerability would give him the advantage. She pointed the gun directly at his chest. “Get out now or I’ll shoot.”

He frowned as if her threat of violence pricked his sense of decorum. “Dear lady…”

She stiffened. Somewhere she’d lost control of this encounter. Which was absurd. She was the one with the gun. “I’m not your dear lady.”

He bowed as if acknowledging that she’d scored a point.
“As you wish, Miss Barrett. I’ve done you no wrong. It seems excessive to menace me with murder and mayhem.”

Shocked amusement almost made her laugh. “You broke into my house. You threatened me with…”

He interrupted her. “Doing it too brown. So far, any threats have emanated from your charming self.”

“You mean to steal,” she said in a low, vibrating voice.

“But I haven’t. Yet.” The expressive mouth above the intriguingly firm jawline curved into a charming smile. “Temper justice with mercy. Let me go free and seek redemption.”

“Let you go free and find some other poor innocent to rob,” she said sharply. “Better I lock you in the cellar and summon the local magistrate.”

“That would be unkind. I don’t like small, confined places.”

“In that case, you’ve chosen the wrong profession. Somewhere someone’s going to catch you and lock you up.”

Disregarding the gun, he took another step toward her. “Surely your compassionate heart smarts at the thought of my imprisonment.”

She retreated and realized he’d boxed her against the side of the desk. “Move away or I swear I will shoot.”

He lit one of the candles on the desk and blew out his own, dropping it smoking to the blotter. “Tsk, Miss Barrett. You’ll get blood on the carpet.”

“I’ll…”

Words escaped her on a gasp as he reached out with surprising speed and strength to grab the hand gripping the gun. A few nimble turns of that long body and he caught her against him, facing the open window he’d
climbed through. With her back pressed hard to his chest, she was overwhelmingly aware of his casual masculine power. His leanness was deceptive. There was no denying the muscles in the arms holding her captive or the firm breadth of the chest behind her. He embraced her firmly across her torso, trapping her arms. She still held the weapon but couldn’t shift to aim it at him.

The barbed but oddly flirtatious conversation had calmed her immediate dread, but now fear surged anew. What in heaven’s name was she thinking, bandying words with this scoundrel? Almost as if she enjoyed herself, when if she despised anything in this world, it was a thief.

She caught her breath and began to struggle against him. “Let me go!”

His arms tightened like straps, controlling her with mortifying ease. Genevieve was a tall, strong girl, no frail lily, but the thief was taller and stronger. She’d never before had to measure her strength against a man’s. It rankled how easily he restrained her. “Hush, Miss Barrett. I give you my word I mean you no harm.”

“Then release me.” She was panting and her writhing had achieved nothing but the collapse of her never very secure coiffure.

“Not unless you put the gun down.”

She struggled to elbow him in the belly but the way he held her made it impossible. “Then I’ll be at your mercy,” she said breathlessly.

He gave a grunt of laughter. “There’s that to consider.”

His body was so close that his amusement vibrated through her. The sensation was uncomfortably intimate. A couple more of those blasted deft movements and she
found herself without her weapon. He placed it out of reach on the desk.

“I’ll scream.”

“There’s nobody to hear you,” he said carelessly, and in that moment, she truly hated him.

“You’re despicable,” she hissed, trying and failing to free herself. Her heart galloped with fright and anger. With him, and with herself for being a stupid, weak female, victim to an overbearing male.

“Sticks and stones, dear lady.”

He drew her tighter into his body and took a sliding step backward. She was suddenly conscious not just of his size and strength—those had been obvious from the moment he caught her up against him—but also of his enveloping heat and the fact that he smelled pleasantly of something herbal. Fresh. Tangy.

This was clearly a ruffian who took the trouble to wash regularly.

He reversed another step and opened the library door with a rattle, holding her under one arm with humiliating ease. She wrenched against him and tried without success to sink her fingernails into his powerful forearm.

“No, you don’t,” he huffed, pressing her closer to his tall body.

“I’ll have your liver for this,” she hissed, even as his pleasant scent continued to alert her senses. What was that smell?

“You’ll have to catch me first,” he said, and she wished she didn’t notice how laughter warmed that deep, musical voice. Any angry response died in furious shock as he brushed his cheek softly against the wing of hair that covered the side of her face.


Au revoir,
Miss Barrett,” he whispered in her ear, his breath teasing nerves she didn’t know she possessed, then he shoved her hard away from him.

By the time she’d regained her footing, he’d slammed the door and locked it from the outside with the key he must have palmed when he fiddled with the latch.

“Don’t you dare ransack the house, you devil!” she shouted, rushing forward and pounding on the door. But the vicarage doors were of good solid English oak and hardly shook under her determined assault. “Don’t you dare!”

Panting, she stopped and pressed her ear to the door, desperate to work out what he was up to. She heard a distant slam as though someone left by the front door. Could her mere presence have daunted him into abandoning his plan to rob the vicarage? She couldn’t imagine why. He’d had the best of the conflict from the first.

Her hands closed into fists against the door as she recalled his barefaced cheek in holding her so…. so
improperly.
“Improper” seemed too weak a word to describe the sensations he’d aroused when he’d captured her like a sheep ready for the shears. Like that sheep, she was about to be well and truly fleeced. She was in no position to stop the villain from taking what he wanted from the house. There was no hope of help until her father returned from the duke’s, and heaven knew when that would be. The Reverend Ezekiel Barrett adored hobnobbing with the quality. He’d be there until breakfast if Sedgemoor didn’t throw him out first.

Tears of frustration stung her eyes and she felt as jumpy as a cat on a stovetop. It was illogical, but she could feel the radiating heat of his body against hers. It was as
if he still touched her. She wasn’t afraid anymore, at least not for her person. If the burglar had wanted to hurt her, he’d had plenty of opportunity. Her principal reaction now that fear and unwilling fascination ebbed was disgust at her behavior. She’d acted the complete ninnyhammer, the sort of jittery female she despised. She’d had a gun. She should have been able to force him out of the house. Blast him, even now she wouldn’t surrender so easily. She could climb out the way the knave had got in, using the old elm tree outside the window. Once she’d caught her breath, by heaven, she would.

The ominous silence extended. What was the blackguard up to? Would there be anything left by the time he was finished? She glanced over to the desk and thanked the Lord that the only genuinely valuable items in the house had escaped his notice. For a sneak thief, he wasn’t very observant, although he hadn’t struck her as a man deficient in intelligence. Or, she added with renewed outrage, impudence. Nevertheless, any professional would have immediately pocketed the gold objects scattered over the blotter, objects she’d been sketching for her article.

Something landed on the carpet near the open window. Curious, Genevieve grabbed the candle from the desk and lifted it high. Lying on the floor was the key to the door. She rushed to the window, but darkness and the elm’s thick foliage obstructed her view. In the distance someone started to whistle. A jaunty old tune. “Over the Hills and Far Away.” Appropriate for an absconding thief, she supposed. Not that he seemed in a panic to flee. Again, his confidence struck her as puzzling. The music gradually faded as the whistler wandered into the night.

With shaking hands, Genevieve scooped up the key
and balanced it on her palm, her thoughts in turmoil. One completely unimportant fact threw every other consideration to the wind. She’d finally identified the smell that had tantalized her when he’d held her close.

Lemon verbena.

The Dish [8 Pages TK]
A
LSO BY
A
NNA
C
AMPBELL

Midnight’s Wild Passion

My Reckless Surrender

Captive of Sin

Tempt the Devil

Claiming the Courtesan

Untouched

Front Sales [3 Pages TK]
Contents

Welcome

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Chapter Thirty

Epilogue

A Preview of
A Rake’s Midnight Kiss

Also By Anna Campbell

Copyright

Copyright

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

Copyright © 2012 by Anna Campbell

Excerpt from
A Rake’s Midnight Kiss
copyright © 2013 by Anna Campbell

All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the publisher constitute unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the publisher at [email protected]. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

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ISBN 978-1-4555-1207-2

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