The Wolf's Promise

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The Wolf's Promise Page 22

by Claire Thornton


  ‘No words of warning or disapproval?’ he asked quizzically.

  ‘It wouldn’t make any difference, would it?’ Angelica said breathlessly. ‘Besides, I tried so hard to persuade you to rescue Harry. I’m hardly in a position to complain now.’

  ‘But you are worried.’

  ‘I’m trying not to be,’ she assured him. ‘How could you tell?’

  ‘When you’re lying so close to me? It wasn’t difficult.’

  ‘Oh.’ Angelica lowered her eyes, biting her lip ruefully. ‘What are you going to do?’ she asked.

  ‘I’m not sure,’ he said slowly. ‘The role of poacher-turned-gamekeeper is new to me. It sticks in my throat a little to hand them over to be hung and gibbeted—killers though they are. We shall have to see.’

  Then he turned his head and smiled at her.

  ‘I won’t come to any harm,’ he said confidently. ‘And think of all the adventures we’ll have when Harry is safely home and you sail with me.’

  Angelica’s face lit up.

  ‘You’ll really take me with you?’ she exclaimed joyfully.

  ‘I’m not leaving you behind!’ said Benoît firmly. ‘I’m a very generous man. If I’m soaked to the skin in a torrential rain storm I shall expect my wife to be likewise cold and wet. No more living in idle luxury for you, my lady! You are going to learn at first hand the tedium of being becalmed in mid-ocean, the inestimable frustration of—!’

  He caught his breath and rolled away from her as Angelica moved her hand purposefully across his lean stomach.

  She blinked in surprise at his emphatic response to her action. She had simply intended to distract him from his mock-solemn list of the discomforts awaiting her. But then she guessed the explanation for his reaction.

  ‘You’re ticklish!’ she exclaimed in delight, reaching towards him again.

  ‘It’s a base lie!’ He grabbed for her wrist, missed, then gasped, his body jackknifing, as she ran her fingers provocatively below his ribs.

  ‘No! It’s true!’ She started to laugh as he seized her hands and rolled her neatly onto her back. ‘Now what?’ She looked up at him challengingly as he held both her wrists in a firm grip.

  ‘I’m not sure.’ He grinned down at her, sunlight warm on his cheek. ‘We could call a truce.’

  ‘Oh, no!’ She shook her head gleefully, her hair spread out wantonly across the pillow. ‘After all the times you’ve made fun of me, all the times you’ve seemed so cool and sophisticated and in control—and all I had to do to get my own back…’

  She tried to pull her arms out of his grasp, a wicked expression in her blue eyes. He resisted her attempt to escape without difficulty.

  ‘Don’t worry, mon amour…’ he transferred both her wrists into one hand, a hint of laughter in his voice ‘…you have always had far more subtle methods of wreaking your revenge on me.’

  ‘So you’ve said before,’ Angelica murmured, as he bent towards her, his lips brushing hers. ‘But I’m sure none of them are quite so satisfying…’

  ‘Positive?’

  ‘Mmm.’

  ‘Angelica!’ The only reason Benoît didn’t leap completely out of bed was because he was too tangled in the bedclothes.

  She laughed uninhibitedly, feeling deliriously happy and unbelievably lucky.

  ‘You’re not safe to be near,’ Benoît growled, keeping a wary distance, although there was an answering gleam of humour in his brown eyes. ‘Very well, my lady, two can play at that game.’

  He dragged back the bedclothes in one swift gesture and it was Angelica’s turn to gasp. She reached out to pull down her nightgown, but he caught her hand.

  ‘It’s only getting in the way,’ he said softly, the laughter in his eyes replaced by a far more intense emotion. ‘Sit up.’

  Angelica did so, feeling shy as she allowed him to draw it over her head and toss it away.

  ‘Ma belle,’ he murmured huskily, and kissed her shoulder.

  ‘I’m going to have to practise my French,’ she said unsteadily, as they sank back onto the bed.

  She was truly naked in his arms now, and in the morning light there were no comforting shadows to hide them. But she didn’t need to hide from Benoît. He was her husband and he loved her. Her brief moment of shyness passed.

  ‘I shall take pleasure in teaching you, mon aiméee,’ he replied lightly, and then stiffened as she laid her hand on his ribs.

  ‘Don’t you trust me?’ she whispered, meeting his eyes.

  ‘No!’ But he didn’t try to stop her as she slipped her hand delicately over his side towards the flat plane of his stomach.

  ‘I trusted you.’ Their eyes were locked together and a smile tugged at the corners of Angelica’s mouth as she continued her deliberate caress.

  ‘I know,’ Benoît half groaned.

  She could feel the tension in his body as he exerted all his self-control not to jerk away from her hand.

  ‘It can’t be that bad,’ she teased him, exhilarated by the power he was allowing her to have over him. ‘I haven’t done anything to make you jump.’

  ‘It’s not what you’ve done—it’s what you might do!’ he retorted. ‘I didn’t expect my wife to startle me half out of bed on our wedding night.’

  Angelica giggled.

  ‘And you don’t want me to do it again?’ she said provocatively.

  ‘I can think of more rewarding ways to pass our time,’ he replied softly.

  Angelica hesitated. Her hand still rested gently beneath his ribs. She had no real intention of tormenting him, but she couldn’t help relishing the fact that she had finally found a way of turning the tables on him.

  He chuckled.

  ‘Make up your mind quickly, mon ange,’ he recommended. ‘We’ve a lot to do today. But before we begin…’

  She moved her hand carefully around his body to his back and he exhaled with relief.

  ‘I thought we’d already begun,’ she murmured, her eyes gleaming wickedly as she rubbed his back in slow, sensuous circles.

  ‘My error,’ said Benoît hoarsely. ‘You’re quite right, mon amour, we have!’

  Epilogue

  June 1809

  The tide was coming in. Lord Ellewood could hear it. He stood on the beach and listened to the waves rolling up the sand. He could hear the seabirds screeching overhead, and feel the hot June sun scorching his scarred cheek—but he could only imagine the glitter of sunlight on the sea.

  The Earl had remained at the Manor House for more than three months, a difficult and uncomfortable guest for both Sir William and his household. He had shown no inclination to go back to London, yet he had refused point-blank to receive Angelica on the two occasions she had attempted to see him. The first time she had come with Benoît; the second time she had come alone. That had been more than two months ago.

  The relentless passing of the lonely days gnawed at Lord Ellewood’s soul. He had hoped that Angelica would make one more attempt to see him, but she had not—and he was too proud to go to her. The days passed, but time seemed to stand still. Until Benoît and Harry returned from France, life could not begin again for any of them.

  Lord Ellewood lifted his head to taste the sea breeze. He didn’t know what he was doing on the beach; he only knew he had been driven by a deep, compelling need to come back to the sea. He had ordered a frightened servant to bring him—but he had forbidden the man to follow him down over the pebbles to the sands.

  Now he stood by himself, a stiff-backed, solitary figure, braced against a gale which did not blow; and wondered bleakly if the waiting was as agonising for Angelica as it was for him—and if his son would ever return home.

  He clenched his fists together in anger, frustration, and shame. He was bitterly ashamed of his behaviour over the past two years—but it was hard to bow his head and make amends. The harsh, discordant cries of the seagulls suited his mood. The hot summer sunshine on his cheek seemed incongruous. There was no harmony left in his life.

 
He heard boots crunching on the pebbles behind him and swung round furiously on the approaching servant. Dear God! Did he no longer have any authority even over a groom?

  ‘I told you to stay away from me,’ he snarled viciously. ‘I’ll summon you when I want you!’

  ‘You already did,’ came Benoît’s cool, soft voice. ‘Four months ago. Good afternoon, my lord.’

  Lord Ellewood was shocked into silence: plunged back sixteen years to the last time Benoît’s voice had come to him out of the darkness on these beaches.

  The Earl had not been able to see his opponent then, and he could not do so now—but this time no dawn light would reveal Benoît’s features to him. It was the final, damning confirmation of all he had lost, and everything he would never be again.

  He held his body rigid, tense with conflicting emotions, as he struggled to master himself.

  ‘Harry?’ he grated at last, his anxiety for his son finally overriding every other concern.

  ‘Is safely home,’ said Benoît calmly. ‘He’s a brave, resourceful lad. I’m sure he’d have managed without my help—but it didn’t hurt to expedite things a little.’

  The knots of fear slowly eased from Lord Ellewood’s muscles and he sighed, his square shoulders slumping slightly in pure relief.

  ‘Where is he?’ he demanded. ‘Why hasn’t he come to me?’ A new spark of fear ignited within him. ‘Is he injured?’

  ‘No. He’s with Angelica,’ said Benoît equably.

  Lord Ellewood’s expression darkened.

  ‘Have you turned my son against me—as well as my daughter?’ he asked acidly.

  ‘I’ve turned no one against you,’ Benoît replied coldly. ‘Certainly not Angelica. How many times do you intend to rebuff her before your pride is assuaged, my lord? Or have you indeed disowned her?’

  ‘Damn your—’

  ‘No!’ Benoît’s icy voice sliced across the first rumblings of Lord Ellewood’s anger like a knife. ‘Save your curses. They earn my contempt—not my respect. Did you lose your backbone as well as your eyes when the coach overturned?’

  The scorn in Benoît’s tone, even more than his words, stabbed straight to the Earl’s heart, striking with the freezing, bitter intensity of a winter frost, completing the work Lord Ellewood’s self-disgust had already begun.

  The Earl dragged in several painful, sobbing breaths. He no longer felt the hot summer sun blazing down on his body. He was lost in a black, barren world of his own. His darkest, innermost fear had been hurled in his face with uncompromising directness by a man he could not help but respect.

  For two years he had been driven by rage; but now he had worn out his anger, and he had nothing left with which to replace it. For a moment he felt utterly desolate.

  But Benoît’s words had had the force of a challenge. And Lord Ellewood suddenly realised that the cost of refusing to meet it was more than he was prepared to pay. He released his breath in a long sigh. His inner battle had left him empty and drained of emotion.

  ‘You must despise me,’ he said tonelessly.

  ‘No,’ said Benoît quietly. ‘I pray to God I will never be set the same challenge.’

  ‘Are you not the one who told me—on this very beach—that you’d rather try, and fail, than live knowing you’d never had the courage to try at all?’ Lord Ellewood asked sharply. ‘No wonder I’ve earned your contempt.’

  ‘I was young and arrogant,’ said Benoît, a hint of apology in his tone. ‘I wouldn’t have the gall to repeat those words now. Will you walk with me?’

  ‘Do I have a choice?’ Lord Ellewood enquired, with a flicker of resigned humour. ‘The field is yours, sir. It’s time I attempted to preserve my dignity at least.’

  He allowed Benoît to take his hand and tuck it through his arm, and they began to stroll along the tideline. They were much of a height and their strides were of similar length. The Earl found it surprisingly easy to keep pace with his companion.

  ‘I think you’ll find you’ve retained more than that,’ said Benoît quietly. ‘It wasn’t for your swordsmanship I respected you sixteen years ago.’

  Lord Ellewood drew in a sharp breath.

  ‘Angelica must hate me,’ he said bleakly, with uncharacteristic openness. The events of the past few minutes had shaken him out of his usual reserve.

  ‘No. She never even came close to doing so,’ Benoît replied, without hesitation.

  ‘I thought she would come again, but she didn’t,’ said the Earl, following his own train of thought. ‘I thought she would come again…and next time I would have—’ He broke off. ‘Next time isn’t good enough in this uncertain world,’ he said bitterly. ‘I should know that by now—if you delay, next time may never come.’

  ‘It will come,’ said Benoît, with the quiet assurance Lord Ellewood remembered from sixteen years before.

  They paced on in silence for a few moments, then the Earl roused himself from his introspection.

  ‘Harry’s safe, you say?’ he said gruffly, although he didn’t doubt Benoît had told him the truth.

  ‘Angelica says he’s thinner than he was, but otherwise he’s completely irrepressible,’ Benoît replied humorously.

  ‘But he didn’t come to find me,’ said Lord Ellewood flatly. He had been hurt by that omission. ‘Does he also despise me for what I’ve done? If I were in his shoes—’

  ‘I asked him to wait,’ Benoît interrupted equably. ‘I had an axe of my own to grind first, my lord. But have no doubt—Harry is as eager to see you as Angelica.’

  They took several more steps in silence.

  ‘What do you want of me?’ the Earl asked discordantly.

  He felt raw, and painfully exposed to the contempt he was sure Benoît felt towards him. It was a measure of his real courage that he had accepted the need to have this conversation at all.

  ‘I want nothing,’ said Benoît quietly. ‘Angelica would like to have her father back, I think.’

  The Earl stopped walking abruptly. He turned his ravaged face towards the sea, away from Benoît.

  ‘I’ve re-employed Hargreaves,’ he said harshly, after a very long silence.

  ‘I know,’ said Benoît. ‘So does Angelica. She’s very happy.’

  ‘Stupid!’ Lord Ellewood exclaimed suddenly, referring to the absent secretary. ‘He should never have let her out-manoeuvre him! But he never failed me before, and I can’t hold him entirely to blame. She’s as stubborn as a mule!’

  ‘It’s a family characteristic,’ said Benoît mildly. ‘Do you still blame Angelica for what she did?’

  ‘She disobeyed me!’ said Lord Ellewood gratingly.

  ‘You prize obedience above all other virtues?’ Benoît enquired softly.

  ‘No! Damn you!’ Lord Ellewood snapped. ‘But in my daughter…’

  ‘You left her with the impression that I was a disreputable smuggler,’ Benoît pointed out. ‘You must have known it wasn’t true. Angelica had no difficulty finding me, and I’ve only owned Holly House for the past three years! In the circumstances—knowing as little about me as she did—it was inevitable she would want to confirm my integrity. You’d have done exactly the same thing in her position.’

  Lord Ellewood swallowed a hasty retort.

  ‘I didn’t want her to get foolishly romantic notions about you,’ he said grittily, almost as if he were speaking against his will. ‘A rich, handsome, adventurous shipowner—she’s been desperate to travel for years—and far more restless over the past few months.’ He grunted sardonically. ‘My petty-mindedness backfired on me, didn’t it?’

  ‘She was certainly very suspicious of me when she arrived,’ said Benoît reflectively. ‘Practically the first thing she asked me was whether the brandy I was offering her was smuggled.’

  The Earl gave a crack of unexpected laughter.

  ‘She must have inherited her tact from me,’ he observed dryly.

  He hesitated, then reached into his pocket and drew out two letters which he held out towa
rds Benoît.

  ‘My lord?’

  ‘You recognise them, I’m sure,’ said the Earl ironically. ‘Your messenger delivered them to me on the day you were married. Poor fellow rode himself into the ground to get them to me. Take them.’

  Benoît did so, noticing that the seals were still unbroken.

  ‘I couldn’t bring myself to ask William to read them to me, and there was no one else,’ said Lord Ellewood distantly. ‘I want to know what Angelica said.’

  ‘You could ask her.’

  ‘No! I want to hear what she wrote to me then,’ said the Earl harshly.

  ‘Very well,’ Benoît glanced shrewdly at Lord Ellewood, then broke the seal and quickly scanned the letter. He smiled faintly, and began to read aloud.

  ‘Dear Papa, you will be glad to learn that I have safely delivered your letter to Mr Faulkener. I arrived yesterday afternoon, when he was away from home, but his mother made me very comfortable while I waited for him. She remembered you from your previous visits to Sussex—’

  ‘Determined to make it sound like an ordinary social call!’ the Earl interrupted scornfully. ‘As though that could make it any better.’

  Benoît grinned and carried on reading.

  ‘When I met Mr Faulkener I was relieved to discover that, to all appearances, he is a very respectable gentleman—’

  ‘Ha!’ the Earl exclaimed.

  ‘I am sure he has both the ability and the means to rescue Harry. He has indeed agreed to do so. Unfortunately, he will not tell me when or how he intends to set about it. I confess I am a trifle disturbed by his reticence because we do know so little about him—’

  ‘Hoist by my own petard,’ said Lord Ellewood fatalistically.

  ‘However, I did have the great good fortune to see your old friend Sir William Hopwood this morning, and he appears to be well acquainted with Mr Faulkener. It seems a pity to leave before I have taken this opportunity to discover more about him, so I will return to London tomorrow. I am sorry that I left without discussing my plans with you, but we had an uneventful journey yesterday and Martha and John Coachman have taken good care of me. With all my love, Angelica.’

 

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