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The Second Seduction

Page 5

by Shelley Munro


  Th

  e woman glared at him. Her light eyes darkened

  with an inner fi re that underlined the stubbornness of her

  chin. Under her cloak, he saw the subtle rise and fall of her

  breasts. When he realized where he was looking, he stiff ened.

  He jerked his gaze to her face and clenched his jaw while he

  waited for her decision. “Well?” he demanded, not bothering

  to hide his irritation.

  Th

  eir eyes met and held in a silent duel, but fi nally she

  gave him a grudging nod. “I will take a footman.”

  Lucien let out a breath he hadn’t realized he’d been hold-

  ing. Despite her compliance, he sensed she wanted to tell him

  to go to the devil. His mouth twisted. Hell, she was too late.

  He was already there.

  “Come on,” he muttered. He gestured for her to pre-

  cede him down the path and made a clicking sound to urge

  Oberon to walk on behind him.

  Th

  ey picked their way down the debris-strewn path, an

  uneasy silence between them. Lucien’s thoughts drifted to

  Francesca.

  His search for Hawk was taking longer than he felt

  comfortable with. Each whisper from the village of St. Clare

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  THE SECOND SEDUCTION

  made hope surge, but the man was proving wily. Hawk had

  managed to slip through his fi ngers. Th

  e man remained one

  step ahead all the time. Lucien let out a frustrated sigh.

  Without warning, the woman stopped in the middle of

  the track and whirled to face him. “Why don’t you like me?

  What have I done to deserve such dislike? You didn’t even

  come to my room last night.”

  Lucien felt his mouth drop. He picked it up so rapidly

  his teeth clicked together. He was her husband. How dare

  she question him? Only one other woman had ever pushed

  him this way . . .

  He reined in his temper, and waited for the tight sensa-

  tion in his chest to dissipate.

  “I know you don’t like me. You can hardly deny it.”

  Lucien snorted. If she thought marriages were made for

  anything other than necessity, she was a fool. “Like” was not

  an essential ingredient where marriage was concerned.

  Th

  e woman glared at him again. And the way her hands

  fi sted, he was sure her fi ngernails dug painfully into her fl esh.

  “You didn’t let me fi nish,” she snapped, her eyes turning

  the same deep, unfathomable blue they had earlier. “Can’t we

  try to be friends?”

  A cynical laugh escaped before Lucien could censor his

  reaction. Friends? He didn’t think so. Although he didn’t say

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  SHELLEY MUNRO

  it out loud, he intended to keep as far away from the woman

  as possible.

  He had loved before.

  And lost.

  “It can’t be that dangerous down in the cove,” the woman

  said without warning. “Someone else is down there.”

  Lucien jolted to full attention. He scanned the seashore

  to no avail. “Where?” he demanded.

  “To the right of the big boulder, the one jutting out into

  the sea.”

  Lucien gazed in the direction she pointed and caught a

  blur of movement before the fi gure disappeared from sight.

  Odd. Th

  e villagers didn’t usually visit this cove. Lucien

  presumed it was because of the smugglers, but the lack of

  visitors could be rooted in superstition. Charles had spoken

  of a shipwreck not far from the castle during the last century.

  He’d mentioned tales of ghouls guarding a mystery treasure.

  Lucien snorted at the romantic notion. It was more

  likely a story put about by smugglers to ensure privacy. Was

  this man connected? Frustration spiked inside him when he

  glanced at Rosalind. Hellfi re. She would get in the way when

  a chance presented itself.

  Th

  e information he’d turned up on Hawk was pitifully

  sparse. Lucien mulled over the tidbits he’d discovered thus

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  THE SECOND SEDUCTION

  far. One of the whispers that had particularly interested

  him connected the mysterious Hawk with the smugglers.

  Lucien had questioned a young shepherd tending his fl ock

  and intimidated the boy into giving him an answer. Lucien

  acknowledged the bullying with a sense of shame, but the

  method had produced a lead. Th

  e boy had blurted out that

  the smugglers had a new leader, a mystery man who wore a

  mask and spoke with the voice of the devil.

  Charles had also mentioned an old hermit who lived in

  a cave further around the coast. Th

  e man’s only living son

  had died in a run-in with excise men and he had retreated to

  suff er his grief alone. Lucien intended to question him about

  the mystery man who had taken over the smuggler gang.

  Someone must know where the man had come from and his

  real identity. Gossip was inevitable in a village of this size.

  Th

  e man must have enemies, a scorned lover — someone who

  was willing to tell Lucien the man’s name.

  Lucien hesitated, wanting to storm the cove and

  demand answers. But he couldn’t leave the woman alone

  without protection.

  A quick glance told him she was still determined to go

  down to the beach. Th

  e up-tilted chin, the fi rm lips, and the

  steady gaze signaled her intentions clearly without the need

  for words. He cursed inwardly, admitting defeat. “Come on

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  SHELLEY MUNRO

  then,” he muttered.

  Th

  e woman turned, looked at him, her blond brows

  arching.

  Lucien felt a slight heat in his cheeks and scowled to

  counteract the sensation. “I have estate business this after-

  noon. We must make haste.”

  Th

  e blond brows arched higher still, and Lucien saw her

  glance at the sun. “It’s mid-morning,” she said, turning her

  attention back to him.

  Now, he felt beleaguered and . . . petty. It was the calm

  look on her face, the steady and candid gaze in those cool

  blue eyes and her damned eyebrows. Th

  ey spoke a language

  all of their own.

  From the corner of his eye, he caught a fl ash of move-

  ment down in the cove. Reminded of his mission, Lucien’s

  eyes narrowed in concentration.

  When he held his dying Francesca in his arms, he’d

  promised her he would retaliate and avenge her death. He

  intended to honor the pledge. Th

  e second part of the prom-

  ise, unwillingly given to ease her passage into death — the

  undertaking that he would seek love again, he shoved aside as

  he turned to the English mouse.

  “If you want to go, we’ll have to go now,” he growled.

  Lucien turned to his mount and made a clicking sound

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  THE SECOND SEDUCTION

  behind his teeth. Oberon trotted obediently at his heels, leav-

  ing the woman to follow.

  Ever
y one of his senses sprang to life. Lucien gritted his

  teeth. Without looking, he knew the woman was frowning.

  Too bad. If she didn’t like it, she was welcome to leave. His

  stride lengthened as he increased the pace, heading toward

  the dead oak, and the marker at the split in the path. Lucien

  stalked along the right fork that led down to the cove.

  Th

  e wind whipped over the edge of the cliff , pulling

  at Lucien’s hair. Th

  e distinctive tang of salt carried on the

  wind and a vision of young boys playing in the sea fl ickered

  through his mind. A smile tugged at his lips, but the instant

  he seized on the memory, his mind locked up, refusing to

  release the slice of his past. Lucien had no idea who the boys

  were, or the location.

  Intense frustration beat at him, as it had since gaining

  consciousness in Naples over three years ago. Physically, the

  doctors told him there was nothing wrong with him. But the

  attack by thieves had left him with huge gaps in his memory.

  Francesca hadn’t cared about his foggy past. An angel, she

  had rescued him after the attack and nursed him to health.

  Now whole in body, but scarred both on his face and in mind,

  Lucien had no recollection of his past. Francesca had said it

  didn’t matter; they would make their own memories.

  53

  SHELLEY MUNRO

  Together.

  Lucien smiled, holding the memory close until a voice

  jerked him back to the present.

  “How long will it take to walk down to the beach? Does

  the tide make any diff erence in when I can go down to the

  cove?”

  A groan built deep in his throat; his mouth curled up

  in disgust. Th

  at was all he needed — a woman who talked

  non-stop and demanded his constant attention.

  “Hawk, the lookout sighted two people up on the cliff . Man

  and a woman.”

  Hawk whirled about to stare at the wizened man who’d

  called out. Beneath the loose black mask, his mouth fi rmed to

  a thin line of irritation. Damned inconvenient. He’d wanted

  to shift the cargo inland today, but that wouldn’t be possible

  with strangers around.

  “Did they see the lookout?” His low voice held authority.

  Power. It breached the distance between them easily.

  Th

  e man held up his lantern and navigated the uneven,

  slippery fl oor of the cave until he stood in front of Hawk. “He

  said they did.”

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  THE SECOND SEDUCTION

  Hawk bit back his impatience. Damned idiot. Did none

  of them understand how the return of the long lost heir

  threatened them?

  Hastings must have a guardian angel looking over his

  shoulder. A snarl built deep inside Hawk’s chest, fi ghting for

  release. He refused to give in to the luxury, the loss of control.

  Hastings might have escaped death at his hands twice, but it

  wouldn’t happen a third time. On this occasion he had a plan,

  a full proof strategy that would allow him to taunt Hastings

  before the fi nal deathblow. Th

  ank God he’d had the foresight

  to clear the tunnels leading beneath the castle. No more spur

  of the moment attacks. Instead, he looked forward to weeks

  of enjoyable entertainment before the culmination of his

  scheming. Th

  e tension inside him eased at the thought.

  “Tell him to take an empty sack and collect seaweed.

  Once the sack is full, tell him to carry it up the path.” His

  words held enough bite to make the older man shuffl

  e uneas-

  ily. Good. A little fear was a damned healthy commodity.

  “Aye, Hawk.” He doff ed his hat, half turned away to

  carry out the instructions, then hesitated. “And if they ques-

  tion him?”

  Hawk shrugged, his mind already busy with alternative

  plans to transport the cargo. “Th

  ey won’t. If he carries the

  bag, his purpose will be self-evident.”

  55

  SHELLEY MUNRO

  “Right you are.”

  Whiting moved stealthily toward the mouth of the cave

  with a minimum of noise. Th

  e best of a dim-witted lot. At

  least this group carried out orders without question. Hawk

  heard the low hum of speech as Whiting relayed his message

  to the lookout.

  A dull thud sounded from further up the cave passage,

  followed by a curse. Long strides took Hawk to the source of

  the noise. He surveyed the barrel on the cave fl oor. Brandy

  trickled from the cask, the fumes fi lling the air.

  “Whiting will deduct that from your share. Do it again,

  and you’ll deal with me.” Hawk’s voice lashed out, leaving the

  man pale in the fl ickering light of the lantern. “Understood?”

  Th

  e man cowered but managed to meet his gaze for a

  brief moment. “Aye.”

  Hawk noticed the silence in the cave, and his gaze leapt

  to the rest of his workers. “Back to work. I want this cargo

  shifted by the end of the day. Move.”

  A fl urry of activity greeted his order as the men put their

  backs into the job at hand. When Hawk was satisfi ed the job

  was progressing, he stalked toward the mouth of the cave,

  passing Whiting on the way.

  “Watch the men. I want this fi nished today.”

  “Today!” Whiting blurted with disbelief.

  56

  THE SECOND SEDUCTION

  “Today,” Hawk reiterated. “Supervise the men. I’ll keep

  watch on the cove. Go.”

  “Aye,” Whiting bit out. “Sir.”

  Hawk remained still until Whiting’s footsteps faded into

  the distance. But under the mask, his face tensed, his eyes

  narrowed. Whiting’s attitude had changed over the last two

  months. He’d started to question orders. Damn, he didn’t

  have time for a power struggle. Not when everything he’d

  worked for looked as though it would be wrenched from his

  grasp. Making all his plans for naught.

  Hawk strode to the mouth of the cave and peered out. A

  man leading a horse led the way, followed by a woman. Hawk

  snorted. He would recognize that brute of a horse anywhere.

  Hellfi re and be damned.

  Hastings.

  His hand itched to reach for his gun. He could fi nish this

  now. And solve each of his problems in one fell swoop. One

  shot would do the trick. His hand moved without volition

  to caress the pistol on his hip. One shot at close range, and

  Hastings would be gone.

  Except that would make things too easy. Hawk stilled,

  frustration making him frown. He wanted Hastings to suff er

  for all the wrongs he had infl icted, to know who killed him

  and why. Hawk wanted to see his enemy’s face as his life

  57

  SHELLEY MUNRO

  ebbed away and savor his victory.

  He intended to dance on his enemy’s grave.

  Rosalind followed the horse down the path maintaining a

  wary, respectful distance. Th

  e black looked docile enough the

&
nbsp; way it followed Hastings and nuzzled at his shoulder like a

  pet lamb, but she wasn’t taking any chances. After a nasty

  bite from a horse when she was a child, she preferred to keep

  safe from harm’s way. Walking on her own two feet or riding

  in a sturdy carriage sounded more sensible, in her opinion.

  She would leave the unpredictable four-legged creatures to

  her husband.

  Her gaze fi xed on Hastings as she absently fi ngered the

  bump on her head. Every time she thought of the intruder

  in her chamber, she came to Hastings. And each time, she

  discarded him as a suspect. She couldn’t explain why, but

  instinct told her he hadn’t been in her chamber. Gruff and

  irritable he might be, but she didn’t think he’d harm her.

  She sighed. Instead, he ignored her, which was a hundred

  times worse.

  For a time she’d thought he’d forbid her to continue her

  walk. Rosalind sniff ed, thinking his decree unnecessary. She

  58

  THE SECOND SEDUCTION

  winced at the slight pain in her head. Th

  e castle itself pre-

  sented a sight more danger than walking about the estate,

  what with all the strange noises and carryings on.

  Her thoughts circled back to Hastings. Sometimes he

  seemed almost angry with her, other times terse to the point

  of rudeness. Th

  en there were the odd visions that assailed her

  when she touched him.

  A gust of wind whistled in from the sea, whipping back

  the hood of her cloak. Her hair toppled from the loose knot at

  the back of her head, long strands fl ying in front of her face,

  obscuring her view. Rosalind stumbled on a crumbly section

  of the path. A startled cry escaped as she fell.

  Th

  e horse shied in alarm, jostling Hastings. Rosalind

  heard him mutter a curse as he fought to calm his horse. Her

  head jerked up warily.

  “Whoa, Oberon. Steady, boy.” Hastings smoothed his

  hand down his mount’s glossy neck and the beast ceased his

  nervous fi dgeting.

  Knowing she was safe from being trampled, Rosalind

  pushed up to a kneeling position with a groan. Small, sharp

  shells littered the path, piercing her stockings and digging

  painfully into her fl esh.

  “Ouch,” she muttered. Tears stung at her eyes, but

  she refused to let them fall, especially in front of Hastings.

  59

  SHELLEY MUNRO

  Instead, she scrambled to her feet and brushed down her

  skirts. Screwing up her hands until her fi ngernails dug into

  her palms helped keep the tears at bay.

 

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