She felt the heat cascade through her with a scalding intensity. She wanted to be bold, brave, wanton…a Texas girl not an English miss…but in the end she disappointed herself and probably him by shaking her head.
If he was disappointed he showed no signs of it as he placed his hands on the button at his waist. Watching it pop free, parting the material, she began easing her dress and chemise off her shoulders. She’d wiggled out of her clothing, by the time he finished with his buttons and was shoving his trousers down to reveal the full measure of his manhood.
She swallowed hard, smiled, met his gaze. “My goodness, Tom, you’re fully growed.”
Laughing, he dove onto the bed, onto her, kissing her madly, touching her passionately. Hungrily, greedily, tasting, stroking, exploring…all aspects of her body. He removed the pins from her hair, fanning it out over the pillow only to fist his hand in the strands and bury his face in the abundance of it, inhaling deeply as he did so, as though to take her very essence deep within him.
She skimmed her hands over his back, his shoulders, along his sides, her fingers now and then noting a trail of puckered flesh and she cursed the life that had delivered the hurt even as she recognized that the journey he’d taken had brought him to her. Had his mother never taken him away, never left him to be raised by others, she doubted that he would have become the kind of man she could have loved this deeply, this intensely. And she did love him, had always loved him.
She could give herself all the reasons in the world for why she’d turned down Kimburton’s offer, but the truth of the matter was, when it came right down to it, he simply wasn’t Tom. Wasn’t her cowboy. Wasn’t the boy who had stolen her heart beneath a vast star-filled Texas night sky.
Her mama had always called Tom a thief, but how could a person truly steal what he already owned?
Tom nestled himself between her thighs, and she felt the first urgent pressing of his body against hers, hard to soft. She was ready for him, she knew she was, but there was discomfort and she stiffened.
“Damn, but you’re tight.”
“I’m sorry,” she said, barely breathing.
He chuckled low. “Don’t apologize, darlin’. That’s a good thing. At least for me.”
“Should we be talking right now?”
He raised up on his elbows, cradled her face between his work-worn hands. “When it comes to this, Lauren, there aren’t any rules, or any dos or don’ts, except to make sure that it doesn’t hurt and that it feels good. I don’t know how to stop it from hurting you, darlin’. The first time, anyway. After that, it’s supposed to be better. Or so I hear.”
“I’ll hold you to that promise of making it not hurt the second time.”
“I’ll keep that promise.”
He lowered his mouth to hers, his tongue sweeping through, teasing, cajoling, almost distracting her…
He swallowed her cry as he joined his body to hers. She held him tightly, to hold him still, could feel the quivering of his muscles as he fought for control. He kissed away a tear that rolled from the corner of her eye.
“I’m sorry, darlin’.”
“It wasn’t that bad, Tom. It’s just…”
He lifted his head, held her gaze, a question in his eyes…doubt, worry, concern. Emotions he seldom showed the world, that he only revealed with her. Her rough cowboy, who could melt her with a kiss, who wore a gun strapped to his thigh, her tough cowboy had a soft heart.
“I’ve wanted this for so long, imagined you this…close,” she whispered.
He blanketed her mouth with his as he began to rock his hips against hers, shallow and deep, long and short, slow and quick, until they found their rhythm. She felt the plea sure begin to build, intensify, until she was digging her fingers into his backside, urging him on. He carried her higher, farther…
Until the plea sure streaked through her, and she cried out for him, for her, for them. His guttural groan mingled with her cries as he arched his back, delivering a final thrust, and she felt the heat of his seed pouring into her.
Breathing heavily, he collapsed on top of her, both their bodies covered in a fine sheen of moisture.
“That was like a falling star,” she murmured.
He chuckled low. “So quick, you almost missed it?”
She wrapped her arms around him, squeezed him tightly. “No, Tom. So beautiful, it was worth searching for.”
Chapter 13
T om awoke to find her sitting on the floor in front of the fire, a blanket draped around her, her clothes still strewn on the floor beside his. He thought about telling her that he loved her, that he’d always loved her, but it seemed a cruel thing to do, as cruel as taking her to his bed when he had no plans to hold on to her.
He got out of bed, picked up his trousers, drew them on, and buttoned them up. If she heard him, she gave no indication, just sat there staring into the fire that was close to going out completely. He wondered if she had regrets.
He wouldn’t trade these moments with her for anything, but he wasn’t sure she could say the same. She wanted Texas, and he could offer her only a little bit of it. Probably not enough for a woman who had taken to working in a shop so she could get herself back to the place that she loved.
He sat beside her, one leg raised, resting his wrist on his knee, gazing at her because he didn’t know how much longer he’d have before she wasn’t there anymore.
“What are you thinking?” he asked.
“How funny life is. You think you have it all planned out, that you know what you want, then just like that”—she snapped her fingers—“you don’t know anymore.”
He took strands of her loose hair, rubbing them between his roughened fingers, memorizing the texture for when the day would come that he couldn’t touch it.
“What don’t you know, darlin’?”
She looked at him then, such sadness in her eyes, that he thought he’d do anything in the world to take the sadness away. “I don’t know what I’m going to do, Tom. If I go back to Texas, you won’t be there.”
“I will be sometimes. I’ve got my businesses. I can’t just let them go.”
She scooted up against him, laid her head against his shoulder, her arm around his stomach. He held her.
“Will you come see me when you come to Texas?”
His chest tightened with her words, because Texas meant more to her than he did. “Yeah, I will.”
“For how long?”
“Forever.”
“Oh, Tom, you can’t promise me forever; that’s not a promise you can keep. You’ll get married—”
“Then I’ll promise you now. And I’ll make good on another promise I made: to make it better the second time. You had to wait a lot of years for my first promise to you to be kept, and I didn’t keep it the way I planned. I think I’m going to deliver this second one a bit sooner. If you have no objections.”
She angled her face up, parted her lips, and it was all he needed. He removed the trousers he’d only just put on and settled his mouth over hers. Plowing one hand into her richly abundant hair, holding her steady while with the other hand, he eased the blanket off her shoulders until it pooled around her. He laid her back, deepening the kiss as he followed. Part of him wanted to woo her with words designed to make her stay. Honest words. That he loved her. That he always had.
The young girl who had sharply criticized his bad behavior.
The elegant lady who tartly reprimanded his wicked habits.
The girl who cared about manners; the woman who cared about etiquette.
The girl who met him in the shadows of the night; the woman who did the same.
The girl whose smile had stolen his heart; the woman whose laughter kept his heart tethered to her.
The daring girl who offered him her unbuttoned bodice.
The enticing woman who carried through on the promise.
The girl who had left him behind. The woman who welcomed him back into her arms.
He skimmed hi
s hand along the glorious length of her, over her hip, down her thigh. Silky smooth. Satin. If his mother had never taken him from England, his hands wouldn’t be so rough against her skin, but neither would they be so strong. In Texas they could have protected her, worked hard for her, given her a good life. In England, they felt almost damned useless.
Groaning low, he deepened the kiss, determined to become lost in it, to have her lost in the sensations that they could stir to life together. They worked well together. Always had. He dared her to be wicked. She dared him to be good.
They complemented each other. Not opposites so much as different pieces to the same puzzle. He could only hope that they’d always come together with the ease that they did now.
Her hands stroked and teased, squeezed and pinched as she trailed her mouth down his throat along his chest, her tongue, heated velvet, leaving moisture in its wake.
With his knee, he nudged her thighs apart. A blanket against the floor wasn’t nearly soft enough, but he was too lost in the increasing frenzy of desire to carry her to the bed.
He slid his arms beneath her, held her close, rolled them both over, until he was on his back with the hardness of the floor beneath him, and she was straddling him. She released the tiniest squeak of surprise, then she was looking down on him, her skin flushed, her breathing harsh and rapid, her eyes glazed with glorious heated passion.
Sweet Lord, it was all he could do not to find immediate release right then and there. Had she ever been more disheveled…more beautiful? Had he ever wanted her more than he did at that moment?
She didn’t question him when he dug his fingers into her hips, lifted her up, guided her down until he was sheathed in her hot, velvety tightness. With a sigh, she dropped her head back. A woman on the cusp of rapture.
“You do the moving, darlin’,” he rasped, as he relished the weight of her breasts in his hands. Not fully growed? The woman had no appreciation for what she was offering him.
She slowly, tentatively began to rock her hips, circling, rising, dropping…
He clenched his jaw, felt the sweat gathering over his forehead. She dipped her head, planted a kiss in the center of his chest, moved up slightly, and settled her mouth over his, her tongue boldly exploring the confines. He ran his hands over her, every inch of skin that he could reach, holding her close, following her movements with his own…the pressure building in him, in her. He could feel her tensing, tightening around him…
She tore her mouth from his. “Oh, God, Tom!”
Then she was crying out, shuddering, arching back, and his body released a deeper shudder, following where she was leading…
She sank down on top of him, loose, limpid, and he wrapped his arms tightly around her while their hearts and breathing returned to normal.
How in God’s name would he ever find the strength to give this up, give her up?
Lauren awoke languidly, nestled against Tom’s side. He was lazily stroking her arm. She tilted her head slightly and saw that he was watching her.
“I’m going to have to leave soon,” she said.
“I know.”
Reaching out, she traced the scar that she’d kissed earlier. There were several others that she could see. “When did you start remembering?” she asked quietly.
Shaking his head, he shifted his gaze to the canopy. “Things come in flashes.”
“But you were his heir—”
“But not perfect.” He looked at her, held her gaze. “I want to leave London. Come with me.”
“Where are you going to go?”
“To my ancestral estate.”
Holding the sheet close, she sat up. “My family is having a ball next week, and I’ll want to be here for that. Believe it or not, hosting a ball always makes my mother nervous.”
“Think she’ll invite me?”
“Of course.”
“I’ll make things right with Whithaven then. Meanwhile, let’s go away.”
“I’ll have to get a chaperone.”
“All right.”
“I’ll need a day to make arrangements,” she told him.
“Day after tomorrow then.”
Leaning over, she kissed him. “Now I need to get dressed so I can leave.”
“I’ll escort you home.” He snaked an arm around her, laid her down, and climbed on top of her. “In a bit.”
Reaching up, she placed her hand behind his head and led him back down to her. In a bit it would be. And then she’d have a week with Tom.
Would it lead her to heaven or straight into hell?
Chapter 14
T om wanted out of London. He wanted time with Lauren. And he was desperate enough that he swallowed his pride, put on his best clothes and his best manners, and made a morning call on Lydia as soon as it was fashionable—which he knew meant early afternoon, although he had yet to determine why it was referred to as a morning call when it didn’t take place in the morning.
Having handed his card off to the butler, he stood in the entryway, knowing there was a good chance that she wouldn’t receive him, not blaming her if she didn’t. He knew he had a whole round of apologizing to do, and he had plans for all of it, but just then his main concern was having a little more time with Lauren. She’d managed to sneak away to be with him the previous night, but he needed more than that. He thought they both did.
The butler returned. “Her Grace will see you, if you will be so kind as to follow me.”
Tom followed the butler down a hallway that he hadn’t walked before and into the drawing room, where Lydia was sitting on a settee, pouring tea into a china cup, while Rhys stood nearby at a window, ever watchful as though he expected Tom to pounce on his wife. Lydia glanced up and smiled sweetly. “My lord, please join us. Would you like some tea?”
“No, thank you. First, I want to apologize for last night. My temper got the better of me.”
“We accept your apology. I assume Lord Whithaven did the same.”
He grimaced. “I haven’t apologized to him yet. I think my apology to him needs to be more public.”
She arched a brow as though expecting him to elaborate.
“I’m working on the particulars,” he said.
“I see. Please do have a seat. I’m getting a crick in my neck staring up at you.”
He took the heavily brocaded chair next to her, so he could keep an eye on Rhys while letting the man keep watch on him. He suspected the Duke of Harrington wasn’t a man he’d want to meet in a dark alley alone. While he had the veneer of civilization, Tom suspected there was a bit of the savage in him as well.
“I’m assuming it was more than offering an apology that brought you here this afternoon,” Lydia said, effectively turning his attention away from Harrington.
Tom nodded. “I purchased your book this morning.”
She smiled with obvious delight. “Really? How are you enjoying it?”
“I don’t think it was really designed for enjoyment.”
“I suppose not. Did you need something clarified?”
“Chaperones. You wrote that a married cousin rather than a mother usually serves as chaperone.”
“That’s correct.”
“You’re Lauren’s cousin, and you’re married.”
“Exactly. Which is the reason that I’ve accompanied you and Lauren on your outings around London. Well, that and the fact that I simply adore being out and about.”
“What about a longer outing?”
She gave him an impish smile. “You mean go out of the city for the day?”
He couldn’t stop himself from leaning forward and clasping his hands, transferring the strength in his grip to his words. “More than an outing and more than for a day. I want to take Lauren to Sachse Hall for a spell. A week or so…I know it’s asking a lot, but I’ll compensate you.”
“And what exactly do you think my cousin’s happiness is worth?”
He studied her, trying to determine exactly where her question was leading and what
it was he heard in her voice: censure or approval. “Name your price.”
Laughing lightly, she lifted her cup, becoming silent only as she began to sip her tea, watching him over the rim. When she set the cup down, she said, “A pity you didn’t arrive sooner.”
“Why? You already have plans?”
She nodded. “Afraid so. Lauren was here quite early this morning to ask me to serve as chaperone. It seems she has a desire to accompany a certain lord to Sachse Hall. And I agreed out of love for my cousin with no financial benefit to me.”
“She was already here?”
“Mm-uh. Aroused me from slumber yet again, quite eager to enlist my aid in getting her out of London for a bit. Since Rhys and I desire a little time away as well, I was only too glad to accommodate her request.”
With a deep breath, he sank back against the chair. “So you’re going to be our chaperone?”
“Quite.”
“You might have said something sooner.”
“But I like to see you squirm a bit. However, make no mistake, I shall take my duties most seriously. I’ve seen cartoons in Punch depicting young people striving to elude their chaperones. I won’t be made a mockery of by being easily evaded.”
“I won’t take advantage.”
Rhys coughed and cleared his throat, as though he no more believed Tom’s words than Tom did. Tom had no plans to take advantage of Lydia, but if Lauren were available to him…
“We can be ready to leave in the morning,” Lydia said.
“I’ll have my carriage brought around at seven.”
“Good God,” Rhys barked. “Have pity, man, and select a more reasonable hour.”
“Ten?”
“Noon.”
“Eleven.”
“Eleven it is.”
Lydia reached over and patted Tom’s knee. “Now, if Lauren can just have success convincing Aunt Elizabeth that I’ll make an acceptable chaperone during a country visit, we should be all set.”
Lauren watched as her mother dug the trowel around her precious rosebushes, loosening the soil, removing the few scarce weeds that had dared to invade her domain. She suspected the next few minutes were going to be very difficult, but she was all of twenty-four, old enough to make her own decisions. She was ready to exert her in dependence.
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