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James River - Lost Lady Part 25

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"And will you raise your fist to me when I dare to disagree with you?" she taunted.

"You've disagreed with me on every word I've ever said, and I've not hit you yet. You keep giving me

children like Jennifer, and you'll always please me. Now let's go back. I need some sleep."

"Are you only interested in the children I give you?" she asked seriously.

Travis's groan, from her question or his sore muscles, was his only answer. "Leave it," he said as she



started to clear away the food. "Someone will come later and pack it all." He propelled her toward the buggy.

"How many people have you hired in the last few days? And how did you get into my safe?" Unceremoniously, he lifted and dropped her onto the buggy seat. "A man should always have some secrets. I'll tell you on our fiftieth wedding anniversary. We'll gather all twelve of our children and tell them the story of the world's most enterprising, creative, most romantic courts.h.i.+p ever."

Shall we mention the elephant manure? she thought, but didn't say anything as they drove back to town.

Chapter 20.

At her door, Travis gave a bone-popping yawn, kissed her hand as though it were an afterthought, walked through her bedroom and out the door leading into the interior of the inn, and started up the back stairs to, she a.s.sumed, his own room. Stunned, surprised, bewildered, Regan stood by her bed and stared at the closed door.

After all he'd put her through, after all the proposals of marriage, he takes her out to a moonlight picnic, never once mentions marriage but instead talks mostly about elephant manure, and afterward leaves her in her bedroom without so much as a goodnight kiss. All evening he hadn't touched her, hadn't even seemed to be aware that she was near him and so very hungry for him. Of course, she'd concealed her feelings quite well, she knew that, but surely he must have been feeling some pa.s.sion or at least a longing himself. Maybe making love once in four years was enough for him. After all, Travis was getting on in years; he was about thirty-eight years old now. Perhaps at that age a man*

Her thoughts trailed off as she began to undress. When she'd put the dress on she'd unconsciously imagined Travis taking it off her. Maybe he didn't want a wanton for a wife, she thought. Yes! That must be it. He'd always thought they were married, and now that they weren't* No, they weren't married all that time they were on board s.h.i.+p.

Sitting down on the bed, she pulled off her slippers and stockings. It could just be that Travis was tired, just as he'd said, and didn't have the energy for rolling around with her tonight.

She slipped into a plain white cotton nightgown, checked on her sleeping daughter, and climbed into her big, cold, empty bed. An hour later she was still wide awake and knew she'd never sleep tonight, not as long as she was in one bed and Travis in another.

"d.a.m.n his tiredness!" she said aloud, throwing back the light cover.

In her wardrobe was something she'd never worn, a gift from Brandy. It was a white silk negligee, soft, almost transparent, and so low-cut it left little to the imagination. There were only inches of bodice above a white satin ribbon, and those two inches were very tight, pus.h.i.+ng Regan's b.r.e.a.s.t.s high above the fabric.

"He may be tired, but I doubt if he's dead," she smiled as she looked into a mirror. Ringing a cloak about herself, she went up the stairs toward Travis's room.

Travis was standing in the center of his room, smiling to himself, a gla.s.s of port in his hand, when Margo slammed into his room. His smile vanished immediately. "Get out," he said flatly. "I'm expecting Regan any minute."

"That trollop!" Margo hissed. "Travis, you make me sick! Do you know how you've looked the last few days? Everyone, this entire town, is laughing at you. They've never seen any man make such a complete a.s.s of himself."

"You've had your say. Now get out," he said coldly.

"I haven't said half of what should be said. I've been asking a lot of questions in the last few days, and from what I gather you don't even know who this woman is. Why should she marry you, a big, dumb, crude American? You're so proud of that plantation of yours, but did you know your little Regan could

buy it and not even miss the money?" She waited, watching to see how Travis was taking this news. He didn't pause or blink an eye, just looked at her with faint distaste.

"She's worth millions," Margo breathed. "And next week it comes to her. She can have any man she wants, so why would she want an American farmer?"

Still Travis didn't speak.

"Maybe you did know," Margo said. "Maybe you've known all along and that's why you're willing to make such a complete fool of yourself to get her. A man'll do a lot to possess that kind of money."

She didn't say another word as Travis's hand grabbed her hair, pulling her head backward. "Get out," he said, his voice low. "And may you hope I never see you again." With that he gave her a push that sent her slamming against the door.

She recovered almost instantly. "Travis," she said, throwing herself at him, her arms around his chest. "Don't you know how much I love you? I have always loved you, ever since we were children. You've always been mine. Every day I've died a little more since you brought her home and said she was your wife, and now this—all this idiocy over her, and I don't understand why. She's never loved you. She left you, but I've always been near, always close when you need me. I can't compete with her money, but I can give you love if you'll just let me. Open your eyes, Travis, and look at me. See how much I love you."

Peeling her arms away from him, Travis held her at arm's length. "You have never loved me. All you ever wanted was my plantation. I've known for years that you're in debt. I helped you often, but I'll not help you to the extent of marrying you." His voice was quiet, even gentle, and it was obvious he didn't like seeing her disintegrate like this.

When Regan quietly opened Travis's door, expecting him to be asleep and to slip into bed with him, she saw him holding Margo, his eyes looking down at her with gentleness, tenderness. Regan pivoted on one heel and began to run.

Travis discarded Margo onto the floor and took off after Regan.

Regan, knowing she'd never outdistance Travis to her own room, tried the door three down from Travis's, Farrell's room. Travis grabbed her cape just as she disappeared into the room, leaving him holding it as he heard the lock click in the door.

"Regan?" Farrell said, his eyes wide as he lit a candle, quickly pulled on his pants, and left the bed all in one motion. "You look terrified."

Eyes wide, Regan leaned against the door, her b.r.e.a.s.t.s heaving above the low gown. "Margo and Travis," she choked.

The next moment she sprang away from the door as something heavy hit it. At the next blow Travis's booted foot came through the wood, followed by his hand as he unlocked the door. Flinging it wide, he crossed the room in two long strides and grabbed Regan's arm.

"I've had enough games," he said. "This time you're going to obey me whether you want to or not."

"Now see here! " Farrell said, reaching for Travis's arm.

Travis looked him up and down, dismissed him, and turned to Regan. "You have twenty-four hours to pack, and then we're leaving. We'll be remarried at my house."

With a quick twist, Regan moved away from him. "And will Margo be at our wedding, or maybe you'd rather she spent our wedding night with you?"

"You can have all the jealous fits you want when we get home, but right now I am sick of walking ropes and trying to find all those G.o.dd.a.m.n roses you seem to need, and I am not going to put up with this anymore. If I have to I'll chain you to my bed, but you might as well know that you and my daughter are going to live with me."

He softened a bit. "Regan, I've done everything I know to prove to you that you love me. Haven't you realized it yet?"

"Me?" she gasped. "That I love you? I've never had any doubts. You're the one who's been unsure of himself. You've never loved me. You had to marry me the first time. You had to—." She stopped as she looked at Travis in amazement.

He staggered backward, his hands falling to his sides limply. Blindly, his face drained of color, he began to grope for some support. He seemed to age ten years in a few seconds as he fell heavily into a chair.

"Had to marry you?" he choked, his voice weak, hoa.r.s.e. "Unsure of myself? Never loved you?"

For a moment he dropped his head in his hands, and when he looked back at her his eyes were red. "I've loved you since I first met you," he said quietly. "Why else would I have cared what happened to you? You were so young and frightened, and I was so scared of losing you."

His voice grew stronger. "Why the h.e.l.l else would I have risked my life on board s.h.i.+p to save that puppy Wainwright you liked so much? Do you know how much I wanted to throw him overboard? But I didn't because you wanted him. And you say I never loved you."

He stood, his voice beginning to get angry. "And I'll have you know you aren't the first to have my baby. I did not have to marry you."

"But you said you always marry the mother of your children. I thought—," she said tearfully.

He tossed his hands in the air. "You were scared and angry, didn't even know you were going to have a baby. What was I supposed to say, that I have an illegitimate child at home, that his mother tried to sue me because I wouldn't marry her?"

"You* you could have said you loved me."

He quietened. "I swore before witnesses to love you for the rest of my life. What more could I have done?"

She looked down at her hands. "You've never asked me to marry you, not personally."

"Never asked you to marry me?" Travis bellowed. "G.o.dd.a.m.n you, Regan, what more do you want from me? I've made a fool of myself in front of an entire state, and you say—."

He broke off as he fell to his knees before her, his hands clasped. "Regan, will you marry me? Please. I love you more than I love my own life. Please marry me."

She put her hand on his shoulder, their faces level. "What about Margo?" she whispered.

Travis gritted his teeth, but answered, "I could have married her years ago but never wanted to."

"Why didn't you tell me that?"

"Why didn't you know without having to be told?" he shot back. "I love you," he whispered. "Marry me?"

"Yes!" she cried, and threw her arms around his neck. "I'll marry you forever."

Neither of them was aware of anyone or anything else on the earth, and they were shocked when the applause started.

Regan buried her face in Travis's neck. "Are there a lot of people out there?" she asked fearfully.

" 'Fraid so, " he said. "I guess they heard the noise when you locked the door against me."

She didn't even bother to correct him, that the noise came from his foot smas.h.i.+ng the door and not from her locking of it. "Will you take me away from here?" she whispered. "I don't think I can face them."

Triumphantly, Travis stood with Regan in his arms and started for the door. The townspeople and even the guests at the inn, several of whom had prolonged their stay from the first rose Travis sent, felt involved in this courts.h.i.+p and came running at the first sound of splintering wood.

The women, in heavy robes, curling rags in their hair, sighed heavily as Travis carried Regan away. "I knew it'd end happily," one woman said. "How could she have turned him down?"

"My wife's never gonna believe this story," a man said. "Maybe she'll forgive me for coming back three days late. "

"You're a fool if you tell your wife this," snorted another man. "We ought to make a pact to keep it secret, or every woman in the country will expect the same kind of courting, and I for one am not walking any tightrope for any d.a.m.n woman in the world. I'm telling my wife I spent these three days with another woman; it'll cause me less grief." With that he turned toward the male dormitory.

Eventually the people decided to go back to bed, jumping once as Farrell slammed what was left of his door in their faces.

For several minutes Farrell's cursing of America, Americans, and women in general did not stop. The two of them had ignored him, giving each other lovesick lies as if he weren't even in the same room. As he began to think of all the money he'd spent searching for Regan, courting her, he grew more and more angry. Yet she fell for an animal that kicked down doors, a b.u.mbling idiot who was considered a fool by everyone who met him. The woman was insane!

And she belonged to him, to Farrell Batsford. He'd been through h.e.l.l to get her money, and he wasn't going to give it up now.

Quickly, he tossed a dressing gown on and went to find Margo. He knew she wasn't a woman to take this public humiliation easily; perhaps they could work out something.

"Mmm, Travis," Regan murmured, running her leg up Travis's. The early-morning sun made her skin golden.

"Don't start on me again," he said. "You nearly wore me out last night. "

"You certainly don't feel as if all of you is exhausted," she laughed, kissing his neck, wiggling against him.

"Unless you want to put on a show for your daughter, you'd better behave. Good morning, sweetheart," he called.

Regan turned away just in time to see her daughter, who took a flying leap at them and landed on Travis's stomach.

"You're home, Daddy!" she yelled. "Can I ride my pony today? Can we go to the circus again? Will you teach me to walk on a rope?"

"Instead of a circus, how about going home with me? I don't own an elephant, but I have lots of other animals and a little brother."

"Does Wesley know you talk about him like this?" Regan asked, but Travis ignored her.

"When can we go?" Jennifer asked her mother.

"Two days?" she asked, looking at Travis. "I have a lot to do before then."

"Now, sweet," Travis said. "Go to the kitchen and get some breakfast. We'll be along in a while. I want to talk to your mother."

"Talk?" Regan said when they were alone, rubbing against him. "I certainly like our 'conversations.' "

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James River - Lost Lady Part 25 summary

You're reading James River - Lost Lady. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): Jude Deveraux. Already has 686 views.

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