A Lady Never Surrenders - BestLightNovel.com
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He gaped at her. "Where was your family while all this was going on?" he asked hoa.r.s.ely. "Your brothers, your sister?"
"They were at supper. Being the youngest, I and my younger cousins were relegated to the children's table, so no one was paying much attention to us at that point. Besides, it all happened so fast ... I managed to slip in and sit down before anyone even noticed I wasn't there."
A ghost of a smile crossed her lips. "They did notice later that Ned was missing, however. When they asked me if I'd seen him, I told them he'd been complaining of a headache ever since he'd fallen off his horse earlier in the day and hit his head."
She looked smug. "He hated that. He was so proud of being known for his riding skills, and after that everyone called him Clumsy Plumtree for a while. And he didn't dare correct me for fear that I would tell them what really happened."
"Why didn't you, d.a.m.n it?" Jackson gritted out.
She eyed him askance. "Oliver would have shot him on the spot."
"Good. I've a mind to do that myself the next time I see him."
"I'm not going to let you shoot Ned," she said stoutly. "That wouldn't help your chances at being chosen Chief Magistrate." He was about to protest that he didn't give a b.l.o.o.d.y d.a.m.n about being chosen Chief Magistrate right now, when she added, "And I wasn't going to let Oliver do it either, not with all the rumors that he'd shot Mama. We had enough scandal in our family as it was."
She crossed her arms over her chest. "Besides, if anyone ever shoots Ned, it's going to be me."
And just like that, everything fell into place. "Ah, so that's when you convinced Gabe to teach you how to shoot. That's why you carry a ladies' pocket pistol in your reticule."
She gave him a terse nod. "I wasn't about to let anything like that happen to me ever again."
A sudden chill swept him. How could she think herself so alone? "Leaving the possibility of scandal aside, you should have told your family. They could have dealt with Ned privately."
"And then they would have found out how reckless I was," she whispered. "How pathetic and stupid, too stupid to ... see that Ned didn't care about me ... to realize he was just poking fun..."
With a little moan, she rose from the bed, but he grabbed her hand and tugged her back to face him. "It wasn't your fault that Ned took advantage of your youth and your attraction to him to attempt a seduction, for G.o.d's sake."
"You don't understand-it was my fault." She ducked her head, refusing to look at him. "I should h-have known better. Boys had never looked at me in that way ... but I thought h-he really liked m-me. All the while, he was just..."
Tears welled in her eyes that tore at his soul. "When I wouldn't l-let him ... you know ... he told me he h-hadn't really wanted to, anyway," she stammered, her hand squeezing his painfully, "since I was a ... a scrawny b-b.i.t.c.h with no t.i.ts and not an ounce of anything f-female in me."
"Oh, sweeting," he whispered, drawing her down onto his lap so he could hold her close. She was breaking his heart.
All their conversations came back to haunt him.
Unless you think it impossible for a woman like me to keep men like them satisfied and happy?
You wanted to expose me as some ... adventuress or man in woman's attire or ... oh, I don't know what.
You kissed me last night only to make a point, and you couldn't even bear to kiss me properly again today- h.e.l.l and blazes. The clues had been there all along, and he'd ignored them. This was the reason for her leaping to such strange conclusions about her attractiveness when he spent every waking hour resisting the urge to take her to bed. And this was why she was determined to prove her grandmother wrong about her ability to marry.
He held her close as she gulped air, clearly fighting back sobs. "He told me he only d-did it to w-win a bet. H-his friends said he could never get a m-marquess's daughter to g-give him a k-kiss, so he bet them that he could."
"That's a lot of b.l.o.o.d.y nonsense," he hissed, then regretted the sharpness of his tone when her face darkened in confusion. "I'd bet good blunt he only said those things because he was smarting over your rejection. A spoiled brat like Plumtree would hate having his pride p.r.i.c.ked. When he found he couldn't cow you into letting him do as he pleased, he attempted to bring you down to his level by speaking vile untruths."
Brus.h.i.+ng a kiss to her damp cheeks, he wished he had the b.a.s.t.a.r.d in front of him now so he could thrash him within an inch of his life for making her doubt herself. "It's what a.r.s.es like him do if they don't get their way. So don't believe a word of it. No boy in his right mind would find you unattractive."
She gazed into his face, still looking uncertain. "I was rather thin then, and I've never had ... had much in the way of a bosom."
"Your bosom is fine," he whispered, thinking of how luscious her b.r.e.a.s.t.s had tasted, how firm and beautiful they'd looked through the damp linen of her s.h.i.+ft when he'd dared to open her gown for a peek. "And even if Plumtree meant what he said, that only shows what a fool he is. To have a G.o.ddess like you in his arms and not appreciate it..."
He kissed her, unable to resist the lush, succulent mouth so close to his. He put everything he felt into it, so he could wipe out any hurt the Neds of the world had given her.
When he broke away, realizing he was treading dangerous ground, she said hoa.r.s.ely, "You weren't always so ... appreciative. When I said that men enjoyed my company, you said you found that hard to believe."
"What?" he retorted with a scowl. "I never said any such thing."
"Yes, you did, the day that I asked you to investigate my suitors. I remember it clearly."
"There's no way in h.e.l.l I ever..." The conversation came back to him suddenly, and he shook his head. "You're remembering only part, sweeting. You said that men enjoyed your company and considered you easy to talk to. It was the last part I found hard to believe."
"Oh." She eyed him askance. "Why? You never seem to have trouble talking to me. Or rather, lecturing me."
"It's either lecture you or stop up your mouth with kisses," he said dryly. "Talking to you isn't easy, because every time I'm near you I burn to carry you off to some secluded spot and do any number of wicked things with you."
She blinked, then gazed at him with such softness that it made his chest hurt. "Then why don't you?"
"Because you're a marquess's daughter and my employer's sister."
"What does that signify? You're an a.s.sistant magistrate and a famous Bow Street Runner-"
"And the b.a.s.t.a.r.d of n.o.body knows whom."
"Which merely makes you a fitting companion for a h.e.l.lion with a reputation for recklessness."
The word companion resonated in his brain. What did she mean by it?
Then she pressed a kiss to his jaw, eroding his resistance and his reason, and he knew precisely what she meant.
He tried to set her off of him before he lost his mind entirely, but she looped her arms about his neck and wouldn't let go. "Show me."
"Show you what?"
"All the wicked things you want to do with me."
Desire bolted in a fever through his veins. "My G.o.d, Celia-"
"I won't believe a word you've said if you don't." Her gaze grew troubled. "I don't think you know what you want. Yesterday you gave me such lovely kisses and caresses and then at the ball you acted like you'd never met me."
"You were with your suitors," he said hoa.r.s.ely.
"You could have danced with me. You didn't even ask me for one dance."
Having her on his lap was rousing him to a painful hardness. "Because I knew if I did, I would want ... I would need..."
She kissed a path down his throat, turning his blood to fire. "Show me," she whispered. "Show me now what you want. What you need."
"I refuse to ruin you," he said, half as a caution to himself.
"You already have." With a coy glance, she untied his cravat and dragged it from around his neck. "When we return tomorrow everyone will know we spent the night together, and it won't matter if we did anything wicked or not. So why not indulge ourselves?"
The irrefutable logic of her argument didn't escape him. Nor did the fact that he was already flexing his hands convulsively on her waist to keep from sliding them up to cup the tender, delicate mounds of her pretty little b.r.e.a.s.t.s...
"I will not be another Ned, taking advantage of your innocence."
"You're nothing like him," she protested in a low voice. "You're honorable and strong and the only man I've ever wanted to show me how to be a woman." She caught his head in her hands. "And if you don't kiss me right this minute, Jackson Pinter, I swear I'll strip my clothing off one piece at a time until-"
He took her mouth savagely, his mind already filling with the image of her naked beneath him, just where he'd always wanted her. In his bed. In his life. How could he resist her? She was everything he'd ever desired, and his ability to fight it grew weaker with every caress of her soft hands, her soft lips.
"Jackson," she whispered against his mouth. "Show me how to be a woman. Your woman."
"My wife?" he murmured. "Because if we do this tonight..."
She drew back to stare at him. "Is that what you want? To have me as your wife?"
He gazed into the eyes that were haunted by insecurity and realized what she was asking. Did he want to secure as his wife the rich Lady Celia, whose lofty connections could further his ambitions?
Or did he want to make love to the brave woman who'd learned to shoot so she would never have to be afraid again, who'd kept her cousin's actions secret to protect her family from further scandal, and who now gazed up at him as if he were indeed the Lancelot to her Guinevere?
Tomorrow they would need a serious discussion about marriage and what it would mean, but for now, he didn't care about her grandmother's threats and his fears about their future. Not when he knew that Ned's cruel words still rang in her ears.
Tonight she needed to hear something else entirely.
"What I want," he said softly, "is you. Just you."
Chapter Eighteen.
Tears stung Celia's eyes. He understood. He wanted her. Not her fortune or her connections, but her.
Then he made that clear by taking her mouth so ravenously she could hardly catch her breath. He cupped her b.r.e.a.s.t.s through her gown, and she exulted. He would be hers now. Her husband. Forever.
"In one respect, I understand why Ned behaved as he did," he murmured against her throat.
That took her by surprise. "What do you mean?"
"It must have driven him utterly mad to come close to having you, only to be denied." He thumbed her b.r.e.a.s.t.s, slowly, silkily, in a way so utterly unlike Ned's that it seemed a travesty to compare the two men. "Not that it excuses a d.a.m.ned thing he did-if I ever get the chance, I'll thrash him within an inch of his life. But if I'd ever come that near to Paradise..."
"Paradise?" With a heady laugh, she unb.u.t.toned his waistcoat. "You're quite the poet for a Bow Street Runner."
"My uncle used to say that any man who can't appreciate poetry has no soul. I thought he was mad. Until now." Scouring her with his eyes, he reached around to the back of her to unfasten her gown, and his voice grew thick and husky. "'She walks in beauty, like the night / Of cloudless climes and starry skies'-it's the only lines of verse I remember. And they fit you perfectly."
A trill of excitement rang in her every vein. "Byron? You're quoting Lord Byron?" She shoved his waistcoat off. "That's not only poetry, but wicked poetry."
He urged her to stand, then stood, too, and turned her around so he could finish undoing her gown. "Not so high in the instep now, am I?"
No, indeed. "I wish I'd known you were thinking of me scandalously all this time." As her gown fell to the floor, she s.h.i.+vered, partly from the chill in the ramshackle cottage and partly from the thrill of knowing that Jackson was about to take her innocence. "I would have borne your lectures more easily."
With expert hands, he unfastened her corset. "And perhaps you would have been nicer to me."
"Perhaps." As her corset followed her gown to the floor, she faced him with a mischievous smile. "Or perhaps I would have tormented you differently."
"Oh?" he managed, though his eyes were devouring her in a way that made her every nerve sing. He left her with no doubt of his appreciation for her body.
His reaction differed so markedly from Ned's that she felt free to be coy, to tease. She untied her other petticoat and dropped it, backing away to step out of it. "For example, I might have worn smocks less often and low-cut gowns more."
His breathing grew labored as he stalked toward her, unb.u.t.toning his s.h.i.+rt as he came. "That would have indeed been a torment."
"Because it would have made you want me?"
"I already wanted you, smocks and all. But it would have drawn other men to you like bees to nectar, and I would have had to restrain the urge to murder them for looking at you as I am now."
"Why, Mr. Pinter, were you jealous?" she teased, glad to have her suspicions confirmed.
His eyes met hers, suddenly solemn. "Why do you think I chose today to go to High Wycombe? Because I couldn't bear to watch you flirt with your suitors for one day more."
Oh, my. Who'd have guessed that Jackson could say such delicious things?
Then he dragged his s.h.i.+rt off. Merciful G.o.d in heaven, who'd have guessed that Jackson could look so delicious beneath his clothes? Though she'd had a hint of it when he'd worn evening attire, she hadn't expected this.
His nicely chiseled chest narrowed to a lean waist that showed no sign of running to fat. Dark hair swirled about his nipples, then trailed down to ring his navel before disappearing beneath his trousers. He had the body of a fencer rather than a wrestler, but his arms were muscled enough to explain how he'd managed to yank her onto the back of his horse so effortlessly this afternoon.
Then he unb.u.t.toned his trousers and shucked them to reveal formfitting worsted drawers that showed every line of his well-wrought thighs and calves, not to mention the distinct bulge- Oh, dear, she was staring. With a blush, she jerked her gaze away.
"Your turn, sweeting," he murmured. "Will you take off your s.h.i.+ft? Or shall I?"
She reached for the ties, then felt a moment's hesitation as Ned's voice crept into her head: Scrawny b.i.t.c.h with no t.i.ts-you don't have an ounce of anything female in you.
As if Jackson knew exactly what halted her, he stepped forward to tip her chin up with his thumb, forcing her to meet his gaze. "I'd give anything to wipe Ned's words from your memory, but since I can't, I can at least add truths to counter the lies he spoke. Do you know what I see when I look at you, my lady?"
Sometimes when he called her "my lady," it felt like his way of putting distance between them. But right now the words held a reverence that stopped the breath in her throat.
"I see a woman of incredible elegance and strength." Keeping his gaze locked with hers, he dragged her chemise off her shoulders. "I see a fairy queen who could destroy a man with a word or enchant him with a smile."
He burrowed his fingers through her hair, tugging it free of its pins so that it tumbled down about her shoulders. With eyes that gleamed hotly in the firelight, he lifted one tress to kiss, then rub over his cheek.
"I see a la.s.s with hair like rich chocolate, eyes that blend green and brown in a fathomless forest of color, and a face and form so lovely it humbles me to think of touching her, much less making love to her."
He tugged her chemise the rest of the way down her body, his gaze following it in a slow appraisal that blazed so hot and hungry that any lingering fear or embarra.s.sment vanished in its wake.
His voice turned hoa.r.s.e. "As for your b.r.e.a.s.t.s..." He bent his head to suck first one, then the other, his warm mouth playing over them so marvelously that she gasped. Then he drew back to murmur, "Ned was either blind or daft or both. Or more likely, a bald liar. Because no man in his right mind would ever think these anything but beautiful."