Untouched
Page 1
Anna Campbell
Untouched
Contents
Chapter 1
“This lass is nowt like any whore I ever seen.”
Chapter 2
Damn his uncle. Damn him to hell, Matthew silently cursed.
Chapter 3
Grace buckled over at the waist and struggled for breath.
Chapter 4
Matthew stood in the bedroom doorway, breathing heavily. Lust thundered…
Chapter 5
Grace heard the marquess speak from a great distance. The…
Chapter 6
Lord Sheene’s acceptance of Grace’s story should have eased their…
Chapter 7
“Here be the wench, your lordship,” Monks said with a…
Chapter 8
Matthew stretched out as far as he could—not bloody far…
Chapter 9
The next morning, Grace found Lord Sheene in the courtyard,…
Chapter 10
Matthew woke instantly, then realized that to wake, he must…
Chapter 11
As Grace slept in Matthew’s arms, he read exhaustion and…
Chapter 12
Holding her in his arms last night had heightened Matthew’s…
Chapter 13
Grace’s lips mashed painfully against her teeth. Lord Sheene’s fingers…
Chapter 14
Giddy with a heady mixture of excitement and apprehension, Grace…
Chapter 15
Grace lay unresponsive beneath Matthew while he pounded into her.
Chapter 16
Matthew twisted up on one arm to look down into…
Chapter 17
The soft words crashed into the charged silence like a…
Chapter 18
Grace wandered through the sunlit woods in a daze of…
Chapter 19
Matthew eased Grace onto the sofa. She stiffened when he…
Chapter 20
Ten uneasy days passed. Matthew cursed each second that Grace…
Chapter 21
“Nothing you say will make me go.”
Chapter 22
Grace crept into the salon and scuttled across to the…
Chapter 23
Grace staggered back against the rough wood of the wagon…
Chapter 24
Matthew opened his eyes with excruciating slowness. His lids felt…
Chapter 25
Grace curtsied deeply as Francis Rutherford, Duke of Kermonde, swept…
Chapter 26
After a fortnight, Grace was frantic with worry about Matthew.
Chapter 27
Kermonde’s carriage lumbered along the track to the estate Grace…
Chapter 28
“I’ll break her neck easy as I’d wring a hen’s,”…
Chapter 29
A pool of afternoon sunlight warmed Grace on the cushioned…
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Other Books by Anna Campbell
Copyright
About the Publisher
Chapter 1
Somerset, 1822
“This lass is nowt like any whore I ever seen.”
The man’s thick Yorkshire accent pierced Grace’s agonizing return to consciousness. Through the pounding ache in her head, she recognized the sound of home.
If she was back on the farm in Ripon, why did her stomach cramp with pain? Why couldn’t she move her hands or feet? Fear iced her blood, froze the voice in her throat.
Remember, Grace, remember.
When she tried, she met only a terrifying wall of blackness.
“No question she’s a whore!” a different man insisted from her other side. “What were she by the docks for if she’s not a bloody whore? You heard her ask the way to the Cock and Crown. She’d want nowt there but to pull a gent with brass in his pockets.”
A whore? They couldn’t possibly be talking about her. Confusion eddied through the fog in her mind. How could anyone mistake respectable Grace Paget for a woman who sold herself on the streets?
Instinct stifled her protest. Something told her it was vital that these frightening strangers believe her still unconscious. Keeping her eyes shut, she battled the throbbing headache and forced her sluggish mind to function.
Stray details, each more mystifying than the last, filtered into her awareness. It was day. Light penetrated her closed eyelids. She was strapped to some sort of cushioned bench and she lay flat on her back, arms by her sides. Stout ties fastened each wrist and ankle and a thicker band stretched across her chest, restricting breathing.
For one suffocating moment, the broad strap seemed crushingly tight. She felt faint for lack of air. Sweat broke out on her skin, chilling her to the bone, although the room wasn’t cold.
And still she stayed as mute as a stone.
Bewildering memories of violence and duress swam up through her nausea and dizziness. Her head filled with chaos. Chaos and swirling, acrid dread.
Clawing back from smothering panic, she forced herself to breathe. Where was she? Without benefit of sight, she could only collect jumbled impressions. No rumble of traffic. So a room in the country. Or at least in a quiet part of town. The reek of unwashed males mingled with an incongruous hint of spring air heavy with blossom.
The first man made a doubtful sound deep in his throat. “No self-respecting ladybird would be seen dead in them black rags. And she got a wedding ring.”
His cohort gave a scornful laugh. “Mebbe she’s new to the game, Filey lad. Mebbe the ring is part of the act like her la-di-da chitchat. Them toffs at the Cock and Crown go for that. If she’s fresh to the trade, all the better. Lord John said make right sure we plucked a nice clean tart, not some clapped-out old jade.”
Appalled disbelief flooded her. She was a lady, even if a lady with threadbare clothes and holes in her shoes. People treated her with respect, deference. Men didn’t accost the virtuous Mrs. Paget for a quick fumble in the hedgerows.
Except if these brutes had troubled to abduct her, they must want more than a brief tumble.
Had they already raped her in her sleep?
Oh, please, God, I couldn’t bear it if they touched me while I lay unaware.
The weight of her shabby dress was familiar. Hard to be certain without moving, but she seemed unharmed. So far.
But what now? A nightmare vision seized her of these thugs raping her again and again. Sour bile flooded her mouth. Only with the greatest effort did she remain silent when every nerve screamed to shriek and struggle and fight.
As she’d struggled and fought when they’d kidnapped her in Bristol.
Oh, yes, she remembered now. Everything.
Cousin Vere had offered her a home to save her from destitution but he’d failed to collect her from the mail coach. After hours of waiting, she’d gone out into the night to seek him. She’d never found her cousin. Instead, she’d met these two devils in human flesh.
Monks and Filey.
They’d been brazen enough to introduce themselves.
Desperately, she strove to recall that short, terrifying encounter in the darkness. She’d asked the two hulking brutes for directions. Lulled by their familiar Yorkshire accents, she’d accepted their escort back to the coaching inn. She’d been so frightened, lost in the labyrinth of dockside streets, that any help had been welcome.
Stupid, stupid, stupid.
They’d trapped her in a narrow alley. Filey had held her while Monks forced laudanum down her throat. Filey’s foul stench, repulsive, unforgettable, lingered in her nostrils. Now the noxious odor grew stronger as he lumbered closer.
“Aye, she looks right fresh. She’s bonny enow to catch the marquess’s fancy. But I s
till don’t reckon she looks owt like a whore.”
Monks grunted. “Any road, she’ll play a whore’s part until his lordship tires of her. Hope she knows a trick or two to keep a lad happy. Or she’ll not last out the month.”
“Happen we should have fucked her while we had the chance.” Filey’s regretful musings tested Grace’s tenuous control on her roiling insides.
“The watch would have been on us. You’ll get your turn after his lordship’s had his fill. Let’s go. The laudanum’ll wear off soon. If she comes to and sees your ugly mug, happen she’ll be in a right state for the marquess.”
“I care nowt,” Filey said. “She’s got a grand pair of tits. I lay a penny to a pound her slice is even sweeter.”
Stale gin-scented breath puffed into Grace’s face. Rough hands wrenched at the high neckline of her dress. Horror kept her paralyzed as Filey ripped at her buttons. A meaty hand shoved under the edge of her stays to palm one breast with bruising force. He was so intent he didn’t seem to notice that every muscle in her body tensed with revulsion.
Her heart raced like a half-broken horse given its head. A scream hovered behind her teeth.
Still she dared not make a sound.
This couldn’t be happening. It couldn’t. Not to her.
“Leave the slut, Filey,” Monks snapped. “If the marquess reckons you fucked her first, he’ll cut up rough.”
“He don’t need to know.” The encroaching, clammy hand tightened cruelly around her flesh.
Monks gave an unimpressed grunt. “He will if she blabs. I never seen a lass keep her gob buttoned.”
“Aye, happen you’re right,” Filey said regretfully. One last vicious pinch, then he withdrew his hand.
He’d pawed her only for a few seconds but it felt like his hands had violated her for hours. She felt dirty, contaminated.
After another revoltingly drawn-out moment, Filey shuffled away. Dimly through the pounding in her ears, Grace heard the door shut.
Finally she was alone. She gave a great sobbing gasp and opened her eyes.
She was in a pleasant room with white walls and two doors. The first was closed and the other opened onto a sunlit garden. Her sensation of unreality heightened. Surely she hadn’t been abducted off the public street and brought here to service strangers.
The laudanum’s mind-dulling effects ebbed. Some dissolute aristocrat meant to use her before handing her to his abhorrent henchmen.
She needed to get away now, before her jailers returned. Before the mysterious Lord John who’d ordered a nice clean tart—she cringed at the description—arrived to see what his minions produced for his delectation.
The opiate still clogged her senses and the vile taste filled her mouth. She desperately wanted a drink of water.
No, she desperately wanted to be back at the Cock and Crown waiting for Cousin Vere.
Panting and sobbing, she began to struggle against the leather ties.
“That won’t do you any good.” As if to confirm what she’d already guessed, a man spoke from the garden doorway. “I should know. I’ve tried to break those bonds often enough.”
She whipped her head around in his direction. Light dazzled her. All she could make out was a tall figure with broad shoulders.
But she heard the voice clearly.
A deep voice smooth and rich as the cream she scooped from the new milk on her farm in Yorkshire. That beautiful cultured baritone frightened her more than all Monks and Filey’s ribald speculations.
Then she realized what he’d said. “They’ve tied you to this table too?”
The man stepped into the room. “Of course,” he said mildly as if the admission held no consequence.
The gold-limned shadow resolved into a gentleman in his middle twenties wearing a loose white shirt and buff breeches. He was more than six feet tall and overly slender for his height, although she didn’t mistake his physical strength. He might be lean, but it was sinewy leanness.
He was the most beautiful man she’d ever seen. Even terrified as she was, she couldn’t help measuring each detail of his appearance.
Fine dark hair grew back from his high forehead. A long straight nose. Sharply cut cheekbones, prominent because of his thinness. His eyes remained downcast under his winged dark brows. He looked like one of God’s angels humbly awaiting direction from the Deity.
Except no angel would study her prone body with quite that level of curiosity.
The heated inspection licked its way up her form with leisurely thoroughness. It lingered at her breasts, making her burningly conscious of her gaping neckline. Every muscle contracted in fear and refusal.
Grace had lived with fear long enough to know facing it down was her only strategy. She glowered at the man. “Are you Lord John?”
His mouth quirked in an unamused smile. “No. Lord John is my uncle.”
“If you’re not Lord John, will you help me? Your uncle has brought me here for…” Words failed her, although she doubted any description she chose would shock this superb and lascivious angel.
That ghost of a smile again. Like the rest of him, his mouth was perfect. Wide enough to be expressive. A sharply defined upper lip. A generous sweep of lower lip.
“His amusement?” The deep voice darkened with irony as he chose the innocuous term for something they both knew was anything but innocuous. He shifted closer so his shadow fell across her. She fought another wave of panic.
Her fingers curled beneath the restricting straps. “Yes. You must help me get away.”
“Must?” The young man stretched out one long-fingered hand to stroke her cheek. His touch was cool but she jerked away as if scalded. He took her chin and held her for his scrutiny. “Hmm. Pretty.”
He terrified her. But he was her only chance of escape before the unknown Lord John arrived. She moderated her tone. “Please, sir. Please help me.”
She’d closed her eyes. Although somehow she knew that fleeting smile flickered and vanished again.
“Better. Much better.”
The monster toyed with her. He’d toyed with her from the first. She swallowed nervously. “I appeal to your honor, sir. You cannot…” No, insistence hadn’t worked. “I appeal for your help.”
“Ah, I knew you could manage the right note. I find myself moved, madam. That slight break in your voice is a masterstroke. Well done.”
Her eyes snapped open. Strange to be both so annoyed and so scared at the same time. “I protest, sir. You speak like I’m an…an actress trying out for a part.”
“Do I indeed?” He bit out the words. With a flick of his fingers, he released her as though touching her offended him. “How remiss of me when it’s quite clear you’ve already been cast for this particular role.”
He swung away from her with a restlessness she noticed even through her fear. Knowing as she spoke that she’d fail, Grace made one last try for this singular young man’s help. “Your uncle means to rape me. You cannot just abandon me.”
He turned back to her, his remarkable face a mask of well-bred contempt. “This confusion charms, madam. And almost convinces. But we both know you’re here for my use, not my uncle’s. Unless one discounts your purpose as his cat’s paw.”
She licked dry lips. “You must be mad.”
He gave a short huff of humorless laughter and met her gaze for the first time. He had rich brown eyes marked by a sunburst of gold. Beautiful, unusual eyes, colder than anything she’d ever seen.
He spoke quite gently as those strange striated eyes stared into hers. “Of course I am, my dear. Unquestionably and incurably mad.”
Chapter 2
Damn his uncle. Damn him to hell, Matthew silently cursed.
His heart flooded with despair as he looked down at the girl tied to the table like some blasted pagan offering. Somehow, Lord John had invaded the secret corners of his soul and read the longing there. From that longing, he’d fashioned a woman of moonlight and darkness. A woman who matched every lonely dream
that had ever tormented Matthew.
How the hell had his uncle known?
And if he knew so much, did Matthew have a shred of a chance of defeating him?
The jade’s terrified gaze, dark blue shadowed under a thick fan of black lashes, hadn’t wavered from him. Whatever else she feigned, he’d wager good coin—if he had any—she was genuinely frightened.
He wanted her frightened. Frightened, she’d be off balance. Off balance, she was likely to make mistakes. Too many mistakes, Lord John would discard her.
If Matthew relied on anything, it was his uncle’s eternal ruthlessness.
She swallowed and, against his will, his attention snagged on the movement of that pale slender throat. Then inevitably his focus slid lower. The top of her dress was artfully undone, showing mounded flesh and the white edge of her shift. His fingers clenched into fists at his sides.
Oh, yes, he needed to get rid of her. And quickly.
“You…” Her husky voice faltered. The incongruous air of authority had vanished. “Surely you jest, sir.”
His lips twisted in a bitter smile. “Surely I don’t, madam.”
The smile didn’t reassure her. It wasn’t meant to.
“I assume it will do me no good to scream.” Like so much else about her, the sound of her voice was unexpected. It was low, and soft enough to turn her clipped upper-class accent into music.
“Well, you can try,” he said idly. “I’ve never found it particularly effective. You’ve already gained my attention and Monks and Filey will have orders to grant us privacy. I suspect, if anything, a clamor from you will only reward them with a moment’s gratification.”
“In that case, I won’t scream.” The little color that remained in her face had leached away to pure ivory.