Marquess of Mayhem
Page 18
“You are more than capable, as you have proven again and again.” He smiled at her as he dropped to his knees on the floor before her, and then kissed the tip of her nose. “Allow me.”
Perhaps it was the gesture, so tender and so unlike him, perhaps it was the underlying affection in his tone, she could not be certain. But she sat still and permitted him to play lady’s maid. He unbuttoned her and whisked away the outer layer of her soaked garments. She shivered as his touch skimmed over her bare arms, sending a bolt of want straight to her core.
The flesh between her legs was slick and pulsing, and she pressed her thighs together in an effort to stay the almost unbearable need. This dusty cottage, abandoned for years, in the midst of a violent thunderstorm, was not the place for lovemaking. As if nature had heard her thoughts, a large crack of thunder rent the silence between them.
“It is fortunate we found this shelter,” he murmured before dipping his face into the crook of her neck and kissing her.
She could not suppress the weak sigh that slid from her lips. Nor could she resist tilting her head to grant him greater access to her sensitive skin. “Fortunate indeed.”
He trailed a path of open-mouthed kisses over her throat, making his way to the hollow at the base where her pulse galloped. Her heart hammered with such insistence she was amazed the sound of it did not ring through the air, loud as the thunder. His hands cupped her breasts through the linen of her chemise.
“So responsive,” he murmured. “So beautiful. Are you cold, darling?”
She was on fire. Indeed, she did not think she could ever be cold again. Not with this man as her husband. “No. I could never be anything other than warm with you near.”
“Good. It is my duty to keep you…” he paused and kissed along the protrusion of her collarbone…“safe…” He nipped her skin. “And warm.”
Her breaths were ragged, her heart beating even faster. She clutched his broad shoulders, marveling at the strength and muscle of him. She could not resist burying her face in the dark, tousled waves of his hair and kissing the top of his head. It hardly seemed possible to have fallen in love with him so deeply and thoroughly, to feel as strongly for him as she did.
“You are doing an excellent job, my lord,” she said, her words ending on a helpless moan when his lips closed over one hardened nipple, sucking the peak into his mouth.
He released her nipple and moved to her other breast. “I could do better,” he said, his voice gruff and even deeper than ordinary, before his lips closed over this stiffened bud, too.
She arched into his relentless suction, unable to resist. “Morgan,” she whispered. “I love you.”
The confession sprung from her, as naturally as her next breath and every bit as true. And this time, she did not mind. She felt neither embarrassment nor anxiety, but instead a deep sense of release mingled with rightness. Why withhold her feelings from him? Why contain her love for him within herself? He was her husband, in word and deed, and she would be his wife for the rest of her life. Where a fortnight ago, she had possessed little hope they would ever share more than a physical attraction, she could not help but to feel differently now.
They locked gazes as he kissed a path down her stomach. What she saw reflected in his glittering eyes made her go weak. “I am not worthy of your love,” he said, kissing the curve of her belly, caressing her with his big, strong hands. “But I am a greedy bastard when it comes to you, Leonie, for I cannot get enough of your love or you. I want it all, and I want it forever.”
She did not know why he insisted he did not deserve her or was somehow unworthy, though she suspected it related to the dark days he had spent in captivity. He had yet to share even the slightest crumb of information about that part of his past with her, but she would not press. She would be patient and wait for him to unburden himself, in his own time, in his own manner.
“You have it,” she promised him, her heart breaking for him. He was so proud and stoic, and she knew now why he had seemed so dangerous to her before she had grown to know him. He was always a solitary figure, forever seeming so alone, so harsh, all rigidity and angles and bleakness. But he was so much more than she had ever supposed. “You have me and my love forever.”
“Nothing is forever.” An indefinable emotion flitted across his face, but it was gone before she could study it. His countenance was once more unreadable, his jaw hard.
How beautiful he was, soaked to the skin, on his knees before her, handsome and fervent and hers. One month ago, she had been a maiden. How quickly everything had changed. How quickly she had changed. And she was grateful for those changes, grateful for this man. Grateful to be his.
“My love is forever,” she promised him, and she meant those words. She meant them with everything in her. “I do not give it lightly. And I have not ever given it to another before you.”
He did not respond in kind, and neither did she expect him to. This was a man who had made it painfully obvious to her that all he wanted was her body. But she longed for his love. Her feelings for him did not require reciprocation, though her heart certainly hoped for it. She would wait for him, give him all the patience he required.
“Thank you, darling,” he told her solemnly.
His hands had lowered to her calves, and he caressed the silk of her stockings, his touch gliding maddeningly upward, beneath her chemise and petticoats, over her knees, past her garters until his bare flesh met hers. A breath hissed from her at the contact, the raw sensation. He had touched her so many times before, but each time felt more potent than the last.
Wordlessly, he guided her legs apart, and she let him. His thumbs traced slow, wicked circles on her inner thighs. And still, he pushed her skirts higher, all the way to her waist. Until she was nothing but riding boots, stockings, and splayed limbs. Until she was open to him, on display for him, his for the taking.
“Ah, Leonie.” He trailed his kisses lower, his hands moving over her bare skin, soothing, inciting. His head dipped.
Her boots skidded over the uneven floorboards. Her thighs fell completely open, and cool air kissed her cunny in the moment before her husband did. His tongue traced her first, licking over her seam, parting her folds, finding the aching bud at her center, and sucking. Her hips bucked. White-hot pleasure seared her.
“Morgan.” His name left her lips. This time, her fingers found purchase in his thick, wavy locks, sinking into them.
He licked her, his tongue flitting over her in disparate tempos. Slow and sure, long and fast, hard then soft, quick, a nip of his teeth. “Mmm.” He sucked, then released her, his words spoken into her hungry flesh in yet another form of delicious torture. “So sweet, my Leonie. All of you. Everywhere.”
Her ability to speak or think vanished. All she could do was feel and surrender to him utterly. His mouth upon her was glorious. She arched toward him, her body leaving the chair, seeking more of him, his pleasure, his sustenance, the release only he could give her. And then, as his mouth worked over her, he sank a finger deep inside her.
She bucked, taking him deeper.
“Yes, my darling,” he murmured against her, his tongue flicking over her once more.
Another finger slid inside her. She was so slick, the wet sounds of him pleasuring her filled the cottage, above the din of the storm outside.
Leonora’s head fell back, her eyes closing, and she lost herself. Need built within her, tightening into a knot, threatening to break.
She gave in. Felt her last grip upon her control break free. She reached her pinnacle, tightening around his fingers, thrusting herself shamelessly toward his mouth, seeking, seeking…
Him.
Seeking him as if he were all she needed.
Because he had become that to her, this man she loved. Her husband, the grim, cold stranger. The beautiful, giving lover. He was an enigma, a beautiful mystery, but he was hers, on his knees for her.
He kissed her inner thigh. “I love watching you spend, Leonie. You take my breath.”
>
Just as he took hers. She opened her eyes to find his intense gaze upon her.
They had the rest of their lives for her to win his heart. And win it, she would.
*
“I am wholeheartedly glad to see you managed to weather the storm unscathed, my lord,” Huell Senior greeted Morgan and Leonie at the door upon their return to Westmore Manor.
“I am not so certain we emerged entirely unscathed,” Leonie said with a secret smile, meeting Morgan’s gaze.
He could not argue, for it was true. She was wet, her jaunty hat still soaked, her white-gold hair curling in damp tendrils about her beautiful face, her riding habit hopelessly wrinkled and damp, the hem muddied. He was no better, it was certain, in his own wet riding attire. But they had returned from their ride different than they had been when they had left. There was no denying it. Leonie was changing him. Had changed him already.
And he…he liked it.
He liked her.
“I beg your pardon, my lady, were either of you injured?” Huell Senior asked his marchioness.
“No, but I do thank you for your concern, Huell.” Her cheeks flushing, she tore her gaze from Morgan’s and settled it instead upon the hoary-haired domestic. “I was referring to the cloud that opened up overhead and drowned the both of us. I am certain I must look a fright.”
“And I am equally certain a lady as lovely as you could never look a fright, even if she emerged dripping from a dip in the River Thames,” Morgan quipped, flirting brazenly with his wife before a domestic and not giving a bloody damn. The boulder had not been removed from his chest, but it felt lighter after the time they had spent together in the old gamekeeper’s cottage.
A new sensation, strange and bright, laden with possibilities, rose within him.
It had a name, he thought.
Hope.
For the first time in as long as he could recall, he had hope. Perhaps all was not lost for him yet. Yes, perhaps there was a way he could alter his plans. Mayhap he could deliver his vengeance upon the Earl of Rayne in a different fashion than the one he had originally settled upon.
The smile Leonie sent his way only served to buoy that sensation. He found himself grinning back at her.
“You flatter me, my lord.” Her tone was sweet and low, and it sent an arrow of heat straight to his groin, which was deuced uncomfortable given he stood in the entry hall of Westmore Manor with his elderly butler as an audience.
He cleared his throat and attempted to count to twenty in Latin to distract himself.
Fortunately, Huell Senior dispelled the silence. “I took the liberty of seeing the earl settled in the amber chamber, my lord. He arrived whilst you and her ladyship were off on your ride.”
The feeling within him froze and withered like a plant beneath the blight of an early winter frost. “I beg your pardon, Huell. Who might be the earl to whom you refer?”
Huell blinked, a slight furrow creasing his weathered brow. “The Earl of Rayne, my lord, her ladyship’s brother, of course. He did mention he was expected, and weary after a long journey from abroad. Forgive me if I have acted in haste in his placement.”
The boulder rolled back into place upon his chest, threatening to crush him.
Rayne was here. Beneath this very roof.
El Corazón Oscuro.
“Alessandro?” Leonie asked, her voice ringing with her shock. A shock that matched his. “But how can it be? He is on the Continent.”
Yes indeed, how could it be? But of course, Morgan knew precisely how. He also knew why. The message he had sent Rayne had reached him. So, too, had the warning, just as he had planned.
Too soon, he thought. Far too soon.
The hairs on the back of Morgan’s neck stood on end. His mouth went dry. In a blink, he returned to that horrible day when he had been taken captive by Rayne’s guerrillas. He had been helpless on that day. And helpless on all the days that had come after until he had escaped at last.
He would not be helpless today.
A chill settled over him. The boulder was immovable, just as he must be.
The day of reckoning had arrived.
Chapter Thirteen
Morgan paced the length of the Westmore Manor study yet again, irritation surging. His quarry had arrived, and he did not like to be kept waiting. Upon learning of their unexpected guest, Morgan had convinced Leonie to return to her chamber and change from her wet garments. She had reluctantly agreed, though her excitement at the prospect of seeing her brother was evident in her expression.
He, however, had not bothered to return to his chamber, instead, sending for Rayne and awaiting him in his father’s old study. But though the earl had hunted Morgan down, it would appear he was in no hurry for their confrontation to occur, because he had yet to materialize in the flesh. Leaving Morgan with nothing to do save tramp up and down the faded Aubusson and grit his teeth whilst contemplating storming to the amber chamber and forcing the fox from his den.
In his next tour of the chamber, he noted a pair of dreary oil paintings depicting the hunt. The former Marquess of Searle had reveled in the sport of killing creatures smaller than himself. Here was one more part of the past that required removal. Morgan would need to replace the carpets and the wallcoverings. Even the desk, an ornate French affair, could go.
He had no wish for reminders of the man who had sired him. What he did wish for, was the opportunity to face Rayne. He had planned this moment so meticulously, but now that it had at last arrived, he felt oddly uncertain of how to proceed, what he would say first. Indeed, he felt…numb.
Because when he had first begun to lay the foundation for his revenge, he had never guessed the day would come when he would develop tender feelings for his wife, the woman who was meant to be his instrument of vengeance and nothing more. He had never even imagined Leonie would become so precious to him, nor that she would be so giving and beautiful and sweet.
He had never supposed she would fall in love with him.
Christ, what a mess he had made for himself.
A hell of his own making.
“Searle.”
He spun about at the low, accented voice, the same voice that visited him occasionally in nightmares. There stood his nemesis, the Earl of Rayne. Dark-haired, dark-eyed, and soulless, his face an expressionless mask.
“We meet again, El Corazón Oscuro,” he bit out grimly.
Rayne bared his teeth, but the snarl on his lips could hardly be called a smile. “Where the hell is my sister?”
His façade had slipped, and Morgan saw beneath it clearly. The earl was furious. A violent surge of satisfaction tore through him. “Do you refer to my marchioness, Rayne?”
The earl’s jaw tightened as he stalked forward, fists clenched. Rayne was a large man, and Morgan knew the violence he was capable of, having seen him in action on the Peninsula. But Morgan matched him in size and viciousness. He stood his ground, unafraid.
“What have you done to her, cerdo inglés?” Rayne demanded.
English pig, he had called him. Morgan might remind the earl he, too, was half-English. But here was further evidence of how shaken the earl was, allowing his anger and his concern for Leonie—his only vulnerabilities—to show.
Morgan grinned. “Have you traveled all this way just to wish us happy? What a loving brother you are, my lord. Or shall I call you Brother now that we are family?”
“You had no right to include Leonora in this,” Rayne spat.
“The Marchioness of Searle, I believe you meant to say.” He could not resist the jibe. “She is mine now, after all. I took great pleasure in making certain of that.”
A dull, angry flush crept over Rayne’s face. “If you have hurt her, I will skin you alive, and then I will feed your mangled carcass to my swine.”
“Your threats mean nothing to me,” he countered, fairly vibrating with a rage of his own. “I am the dangerous one here on English soil, not you.”
“It was you who had me removed
from my post, was it not?” His accent grew even more pronounced.
Ah, victory. It did not feel as satisfying as he had supposed it would, but here, at last, was his opportunity to gloat. To know he alone had the upper hand. All the power.
“Did you truly believe I would not notify our superiors of your failure after I learned your true identity?” he countered.
“I am surprised you learned my identity at all, Searle.” Rayne sneered. “You were always rather estúpido, no? Dull-witted.”
Despite being the heir to an English earldom, Rayne had spent much of his life in his mother’s homeland, and it showed in his speech. Morgan had conducted his research well, and he knew the strained relationship Rayne had shared with the former earl. He also knew Rayne had allowed his estates to be managed in his absence by an inept steward who was perhaps even swindling him, and that the entail was suffering badly. But above all, he knew Rayne’s infrequent trips back to English shores had been for the sole purpose of seeing to his sister’s wellbeing, the one duty in England which meant enough to him to force his return.
Leonie.
And that was where Morgan had decided to strike first.
“If I am stupid, what does that make you, Rayne?” Morgan countered coldly. “You jeopardized an entire mission by having me taken captive by your own forces.”
At the time of his capture, Morgan had been leading a network of spies throughout the Peninsula. His mission on the day of his capture by Rayne’s guerrillas had been to make his way behind enemy forces and ascertain their movements and positioning. Because of the danger of capture and the secretive nature of his mission, he had not been told who he was meeting in the Spanish countryside, only that his contact would appear following his and Crispin’s meeting with El Corazón Oscuro.
“My men were meant to take you captive,” Rayne countered. “I do not suppose Chapin told you that, did the spineless weasel?”
This information gave him pause. “Chapin told me nothing. I uncovered the information on my own. I know you were meant to escort me to the rendezvous point that day. But instead, in some foolish show of force, you had your men take me prisoner.”