The Beloved One (9 page)

Read The Beloved One Online

Authors: Danelle Harmon

Tags: #Romance, #Historical, #Fiction

BOOK: The Beloved One
5.33Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Oh, what she wouldn't give to have him kiss her again!

Amy!
she scolded herself, shivering the thought away.

"Are you cold, Miss Leighton?"

"A little," she fibbed, not wanting him to know the effect he had on her.  As it was, the mere warmth of his hand over her own was making jelly of her knees and butterflies of her heartbeat.  She must ignore these — these
feelings
!  Putting a safe distance between them, she led him back out to the keeping room, where she guided his hand toward the length of yarn she'd tied around a nail while he'd slept.  She closed his fingers around it, and released his hand.

"What is this?"

"Yarn.  I've strung it from here, to the door, and from there, to the privy outside.  I thought you might . . . well, I thought you might appreciate it," she finished lamely, as an odd, cold look came over his face.  She hoped she hadn't offended or embarrassed him.  She was only trying to help.  To give him confidence to find his way through his strange new world with more independence than fate had dealt him.

"Thank you," he said tightly, and then, looking sleep-rumpled and faintly scandalous in his stockinged feet, worked his way down the rope and outside.  Amy got out a bowl for the broth she hoped he would eat.  She worried about him out there.  Hoped he wouldn't trip over anything, or grow suddenly dizzy and fall.  It was all she could do not to go to the door, but she knew she must not hover too much, nor be so helpful that she was stifling.  Lord Charles did not need a nanny.  What he needed was independence, and the realization that he wasn't as helpless — or useless — as he seemed to think he was.

And most of all, she thought fiercely, he needed to eat.

Two minutes later, he came back in.  "I think I will have that water in which to wash, now," he said, removing the banyan.  "And then, if it pleases you, I will eat."

"Oh, yes, it would please me very much, Lord Charles!"

He smiled tightly.  "I am only doing this for your sake, Miss Leighton.  Not my own.  I really have no appetite.  But, you've gone to such trouble on my behalf, I feel obliged to repay your kindness."

She took the banyan from him and draped it over a chair.  "I hope you don't mean that."

"I beg your pardon?"

"I said, I hope you don't mean that.  I want you to eat because you
need
to eat.  Because you need to regain your strength.  If you don't do it for yourself, Captain de Montforte, then do it for your fiancée.  After all, what would she think if we were to send you back to her all skin and bones?"

"God knows what she's going to think as it is," he said cryptically.  "But you are entirely correct, Miss Leighton.  I will have some of that broth, for her sake — as well, of course, for yours."

"And
I
will get that hot water for you," she said, springing up and hastening toward the hearth.

"Please.  There is no need to rush on my account."

"Yes, but —"

"Miss Leighton."  He smiled grimly.  "You may be your family's slave, but you are not mine."

"I'm not a slave."

"No?"

"Slaves labor but don't get paid.  Slaves are often mistreated.  Slaves have no time to themselves, exist to serve the needs of others, and are not appreciated."

"Yes.  My point exactly."

Amy cheeks burned with embarrassment.  Though she was tempted to challenge the remark, and angrily at that, she didn't want him asking questions she had no wish to answer.  Better that he didn't know the truth about her — then, at least, he'd continue to be kind to her, to talk to her, to treat her as though she was something precious and special.

Besides, he was bound to find out about her shameful beginnings, anyhow.  Ophelia and Mildred would make sure of it.  Quietly, she went about getting him his hot water.

"Miss Leighton?"

"Yes?"

"Have I offended you?"

"No."  And then:  "But I'm not a slave, I have a nice home here, and I have nothing to complain about, so please don't make my business your own, Captain.  Now here's your hot water, soap, and a towel, and when you're finished, I'll see you eat whether you want to or not."

His elegant brows rose in surprise and amusement.  "I beg your pardon?"

Good heavens!  Had she really been so rude?  "I said, I'd like to see you eat something," she mumbled, embarrassed.

"My dear Miss Leighton.  I daresay I liked it better when you were snapping at me!"

"I wasn't snapping . . . was I?"

His lips curved in a smile; a real one this time, and one so rich and warm and wonderful that it made the sun shine like July in Amy's heart, warming her from head to toe.  "You were," he said mildly, "and I must confess I much prefer your temper over your meekness.  Snap at me all you want.  And snap at your sisters, too.  If you'd only turn some of that mettle on them, perhaps they'd treat you with the respect you deserve."

She went quiet.  Too quiet.

"Miss Leighton?" he asked, plunging his hands into the bowl of water and then searching around for the soap.  "
Now
have I offended you?"

"No . . . but they will never treat me with respect, because . . . well, because I don't deserve any."

"What an absurd thing to say!  Why the devil do you think that?"

"Can we please change the subject?"

He sighed, found the soap, and bending his head toward the bowl of water, lathered his face, ears, neck and nape.  "Very well, then.  If that's what you want, I shall endeavor to keep my curiosity, and my protests, to myself."  Gripping the sides of the washstand for balance, he lowered his head into the bowl, vigorously soaped both his hair and his shorn scalp, and reaching blindly out for the pitcher, poured the entire lot over his head.  "However," he said, sputtering as water ran down his face and into his eyes, "I will warn you right now that I will not suffer things as cheerfully as do you."

"Meaning?"

"Meaning that if I perceive an injustice toward you, I will not let it pass unremarked."  He straightened up, gingerly towelling his head and the still-raw stitches.  "Now, if I might have some privacy?"  He grinned.  "The rest of me needs washing as well."

Amy blushed.  "Yes — yes, of course.  Would you like me to fetch the tub?"

"No, I can make do with this, until tomorrow.  There's no need for you to put yourself to the trouble of hauling in a bath for me."

"But —"

"
Miss Leighton
."

She sighed.  "Very well then, Captain de Montforte.  I'll just get you some more hot water, then — and a clean new shirt."

"A heavenly suggestion, but I'm afraid that I only have the one."

"No.  You have three."  She grinned and straightened the cuff of her short-gown as he turned toward her in surprise.  "I did some sewing these past few days while you lay senseless."

"What?"

"I made you two new shirts, and by the end of next week, you'll have a waistcoat, a frock, and a second pair of breeches."

He actually blushed.  "Breeches?  How did you . . . get the fit?"

If he was red, Amy was even redder.  "I um . . . measured your leg while you slept."

"Did you now?  Well . . . if I might have my original ones in the interim, it would make me feel a bit more . . . covered."

Her cheeks were blazing.  "Of course — I'll be right back."

A moment later, she was handing him both a fresh shirt and the breeches that Will and Sylvanus had removed from his inert body, freshly cleaned and white once more.  Hoping to save both of them further embarrassment, she quickly changed the subject as he placed the clothes on the floor beside his foot.  "I hope you like the things I'm making," she stammered, trying to fill the awkwardness left by the recent turn of their conversation.  "I know you're probably used to fine silks, velvets and satins, but homespun and various sorts of wool are really about all we have, I'm afraid . . ."

"Miss Leighton."

"Lord Charles?"

He gave her that special smile that melted everything inside her.  "You are an angel.  And don't forget it."

You are an angel.  And don't forget it.

If the smile had set her heart a-twirl, then a compliment like that was enough to spin her off her feet.  Thank heavens he couldn't know how the simplest things he did and said, affected her!  Leaving him to his ablutions, she slipped into the parlor, shutting the door behind her and leaning heavily against it.  She tipped her head back and put a hand over her rapidly pounding heart.

She was all out of breath.

Beyond the door, she could hear him moving about.  A curse as he bumped his elbow on something.  And now, splashing.  Pauses as he scrubbed himself.  More splashing.  Amy couldn't help it — her knees grew weak as unbidden, her mind conjured up deliciously wicked images of him, tall, strong, virile and — oh! — stark naked.  Her blood went all hot and prickly at the thought and she put her palms to her suddenly warm cheeks. 
Stop that!
she told herself.  She shouldn't be fantasizing about Lord Charles; he already had a fiancée, and besides, he was so far beyond her reach that she might as well dream of touching the stars.

Presently, the splashing stopped, and there was silence.  She imagined him towelling himself dry.  She imagined him feeling about, trying to find his clothes.  And she imagined him donning his new shirt, the tiny stitches she had made, the fabric she had cut, lying so intimately against his clean, warm skin —

"Miss Leighton?"

She jumped guiltily and yanked open the door.  There he stood, barefoot and bare-chested, clad only in his breeches and nothing else.  With his fingers, he had slicked back his wet hair, and there was an apologetic little smile on his face.  He was holding the damp towel in one hand.

Amy swallowed and stared. 
Oh, please God, don't let me be thinking of him the way I'm thinking of him.  Hhe has a fiancée who loves him; this is wrong, wrong!

But she couldn't help the direction of her thoughts.  Not with him looking the way he did.  Stray bubbles of soap still clung to shoulders that were wide and powerful, clung to upper arms strapped with muscle, clung to the damp hair on his chest and now rode a trickle of water down his concave belly and toward his waistband.  Amy's gaze followed the trickle, arrived at that waistband —

And froze.

"You m-missed some of the soap," she said faintly.

"Yes, I know.  Do you think you could wipe it off?" he asked, offering the towel.

Amy hesitated.  Now that he was awake and capable of feeling her touch, now that she knew he had a fiancée, and now that she had these — these
thoughts
about him, she didn't think touching him was such a good idea.  It was one thing while he was unconscious and somewhat anonymous, but not now.  Not now, with her body responding to him the way it was, not now with the knowledge that he had a fiancée who loved him.  If she were Juliet Paige, would she want some other woman wiping soap off her man?

Certainly not!

"Miss Leighton?"

"Y-yes?"

He smiled in a pained sort of way.  "My skin, perhaps because I am fair, is not as robust as the rest of me.  It is sensitive to soap residue.  Though I cannot see it, of course, I know that I haven't got it all off because I am starting to itch like the devil, and I'm afraid that if something isn't soon done about it, I shall end up looking as though I have the pox."

Amy gulped.  "Do you think Juliet will mind?"

"Mind what?"

"Well, the soap . . . my wiping it off seems to be a rather intimate gesture, and I don't want to do anything that wouldn't be right . . ."

"Miss Leighton, what the
devil
are you on about?  You've cared for me these past days and probably saw things no gentle maid should have seen, and now this?  You're only wiping off soap, for heaven's sake, not kissing me —"

"I've already done that as well."

"
What?
"

"Well,
you
kissed me, I should say.  Quite without my knowing you were going to do so, and while you were half out of your head and thinking I was your Juliet."

"I do not remember kissing you, so therefore, it doesn't quite matter, does it?"

It matters to me.
  "Well . . ."

"Miss Leighton?"  He held the towel straight out.  "Please.  I am on fire.  In another five minutes I shall be covered with tiny red spots.  Surely, wiping excess soap from my skin is nothing more intimate than what you've been doing for me during the entire time I lay ill?"

"Yes, but then you were unconscious . . . and then, I didn't know you had a fiancée."

"My fiancée is not so jealous, or underendowed in confidence, that she would regard such a favor on your part as an intrusion or a crime," he said, beginning to sound impatient.

Amy bit her lip.  "Very well then," she said, and reaching out, took the damp towel.  She dipped it into what remained of the clean hot water, wrung it out, and gingerly touched it to his neck.

Suds glistened there, caught in the little grooves between tendons and muscle.  He stood still and relaxed as she wiped them away, though Amy, racked by involuntary little shivers, was not so composed.  He was just too close.  He was just too handsome, especially with his wet hair slicked back and making the hawkish features of his face, with its aristocratic nose and those deceptively lazy, clearer-than-water, blue eyes, all the more pronounced.  He loomed above her in a way that made her feel both protected and awed, and his nearness made her breathless, hot, and prickly with awareness.  She clamped her knees together.  Could he hear the way her heart was suddenly pounding?  Could he feel the heat that must be coming off her?  And oh, Lord help her, could he guess her wicked, sinful thoughts?

Again, she dipped the towel in the bowl, wrung it out, and with trembling fingers, drew it out over his collarbone.  She wiped down his shoulders and upper arms, her touch growing more confident, her gaze growing reverent, as she went.  Oh, such muscles he had, sharp with definition and hard as marble, even at rest!  Oh, how tall and very manly he was!  She cleaned the frothy suds from the inside of his elbow, then pulled the towel down his forearms and out over his wrists.  What would those arms feel like around her?  What would the touch of those fingers be like against her cheek?

Other books

Uncanny Day by Cory Clubb
The Helium Murder by Camille Minichino
Cold Kill by David Lawrence
Sleeping Around by Brian Thacker
The Cold Cold Sea by Linda Huber
Tabula Rasa by Downie, Ruth
Julia Vanishes by Catherine Egan
Teena Thyme by Pope, Jennifer Jane