Part 29 (1/2)

”You...”

He started back as if she touched him now. He'd vaguely noticed she'd taken his arm. When was the last time he'd vaguely noticed even the merest contact with anyone?

Good G.o.d, could she be right about s.e.xual excitement offering a reprieve? None of the doctors had suggested it. Ever since his rescue from Rangapindhi, he'd a.s.sumed he faced a life of eternal celibacy. Had he been mistaken?

He compelled his l.u.s.t-fogged mind to review the facts. He'd just maintained extremely intimate contact with his wife. He was far from composed-he was fuming and upset and randy as h.e.l.l. But if he felt ill, it was his conscience that troubled him, not memories of Rangapindhi.

As if she knew he at last took her idea seriously, she stepped forward and placed one hand flat over his heart. Her cheeks were brilliant with color. ”Gideon, what just happened was so lovely. Let's not spoil it by fighting.”

He tensed for the familiar sick reaction. There was only the warmth of her hand and the hardening of his c.o.c.k, which definitely approved of her plan for a normal marriage.

”Lovely?” he forced out in blank astonishment.

Lovely and exciting. His brain tried to make sense of what she said. Neither word seemed adequate to describe that earth-shattering s.e.x. But he was human enough to be grateful she hadn't found his untrammeled pa.s.sion completely distasteful.

She nodded and sent him a smile that made his gut tighten with the same l.u.s.t that had got him in trouble only a short while ago. ”Yes, lovely.”

Hope, so long a stranger in his life, inched into uncertain life. Was it possible he had changed? He could hardly bear to contemplate the idea. The sudden intrusion of light into the Stygian darkness of his life blinded him, left him bewildered.

Hardly believing he could, he lifted one gloved hand and placed it over hers. Through the fine kid, the heat of her skin was a distant echo of life and joy.

For a forbidden moment, he basked in the glow of her hazel eyes. His hand shook, but with emotion not physical weakness.

He found his voice, rusty, thick, unsteady. ”Truce.”

He loved her.

Charis could hardly believe it. But Gideon's quaking desperation as he clutched her hand to his chest convinced her it was true, perhaps more than actually hearing the words.

With that declaration, Gideon changed her world forever. Her heart rejoiced. She felt new, reborn, strong. At last there was a chance she could win what she wanted with all her soul for both of them. A life of happiness, a future at Penrhyn, children, contentment, peace.

She and Gideon spent the afternoon tooling around Jersey's lanes in a hired curricle. When he suggested the outing, she'd leaped at the chance to escape their rooms. In the cramped conveyance, awareness tautened between them, but movement and air made the bristling atmosphere bearable.

Almost.

With a flourish, Gideon drew the vehicle to a stop on the crest of a hill. Below spread a vista of fields, with the sea silver in the distance. A breeze teased strands of hair from under her bonnet. The gloomy weather had cleared, and the day was fragrant with coming spring.

He loved her.

The sun shone more brightly. The birds sang more fervently. The air brushed across her skin more sweetly.

”Oh, what a pretty place.” She risked tucking her gloved hand around his arm.

When he didn't recoil, she leaned forward, deliberately rubbing the side of her breast against him. Surprised pleasure awoke as she heard his breath catch.

Those torrid moments in his arms had taught her so much. That she could drive him mad with need. That he could touch her with the deepest intimacy. That the sensation of her husband's body pumping into hers was the purest excitement she'd ever known.

Now she was familiar with the scent of his arousal, the sound he made in his throat when he penetrated her flesh, his hard strength as he pounded into her. The experience hadn't been entirely comfortable. He'd been rough, and she wasn't yet accustomed to a man's pa.s.sion.

He'd thundered into her like a regiment of horses charging down an enemy position. She should have been terrified.

Instead, she'd loved every hot, sweaty minute.

She'd loved his body joining with hers. She'd loved seeing him a helpless slave to desire.

She wanted him to do it again. Soon.

His arm was rigid under her hold, but at least he didn't pull away. ”It's good to get out of town.” Did she hear a trace of huskiness in his comment?

”The press of people worries you?” She turned to study him. He'd been preoccupied most of the day but to her relief, he showed no signs of illness. What happened this morning had clearly unsettled him. She couldn't doubt he'd found physical satisfaction. But his mind was far from easy.

She curled her fingers around his arm, testing the unrelenting muscle. He was so strong and masculine. The heated memory of him surging into her filled her senses. She felt her color rise.

He sent her a brief, a.s.sessing glance. ”A little.”

It took her a moment to realize he answered her question. The problem with this plan to drive him out of his mind with l.u.s.t was that she wasn't exactly immune to his touch either. So difficult to focus on a goal when his mere presence turned her into a steaming pool of desire.

She reminded herself to be patient. This would be a long, slow siege, but victory would be worth it. For Gideon and for her.

”London must have been a nightmare.”

He looked over the horses' heads, and his gloved hands tightened on the reins. ”Yes.”

”How did you bear it?”

He shrugged. ”I had no choice. The sovereign commanded. I obeyed. I drank. I took opium when liquor failed. I canceled what engagements I could. Tulliver and Akash helped.”

”And now there's St. Helier.”

He smiled. ”Believe me, St. Helier is much easier than London.”

”Don't worry. We'll soon be back at Penrhyn.”

Amus.e.m.e.nt sparked his dark eyes to starlight as he glanced at her. ”Good G.o.d, madam, you sound like a wife.”

She met his gleaming gaze, shadowed under the curling brim of his stylish hat. He looked like a buck of the ton. Impossible to reconcile this elegance with the rumpled, satiated man from a few hours ago.

”I am a wife,” she said softly. For the first time, she almost felt like one. His eyes changed, focused, and her heart s.h.i.+fted in her breast. ”I wish you'd kiss me,” she whispered before she reminded herself what trouble her propensity for blurting out her thoughts had already caused.

A taut silence fell. She waited for him to retreat as he had so often before.

The humor drained from his face, replaced by a concentrated sensuality. His gaze dropped to her mouth. Her breath escaped her parted lips on a sigh.

Her senses sharpened. The sounds around them suddenly seemed unusually loud. Birdsong. The sea's distant roar. The jangle of harness as one of the horses s.h.i.+fted.

Then her heart's furious pounding drowned out everything else.

Slowly, so slowly she thought she'd die with waiting, his face moved closer. His warm, moist breath feathered across her lips. She made a choked sound of yearning.

If he stopped now, she'd scream.