Authors: T.J. Bennett
Tags: #Paranormal, #Series, #entangled publishing, #romance series, #Dark Angel, #Gothic Fairy Tale, #Romance, #TJ Bennett
Like a puff of air through a wreath of smoke, the wind blew the fog into shreds and the shape I had imagined disappeared. I stared at the gate for a long moment, and then laughed nervously, feeling ridiculous.
“Madam?” Jeffries said, sounding confused.
The trees above my head rustled, and my heart leaped. I imagined something leering down at me from the branches, but I immediately tamped the thought down. I had frightened myself into a tizzy, and I surely had more resilience than that, given my past experiences.
“Yes, Jeffries. I believe I am quite ready to go inside.”
…
As promised, that evening Gerard fetched me for dinner. Once again, the cook prepared a groaning sideboard of sumptuous delights, but I had little appetite for such fancy fare. Even the excellent offerings from Gerard’s wine cellar did little to settle my nerves from this afternoon’s events, or to distract me from the problem of finding my way back home.
With a sigh, I pushed aside my third glass of wine unfinished and instead sampled the bread—a delicious, soft loaf with caraway seeds.
“
Ynys Nos
is in the middle of the Irish Sea, is it not?” I asked around a small bite.
When Gerard did not immediately answer, I glanced up and caught him watching my mouth as I ate. He absentmindedly toyed with the stem of his wineglass, stroking it with the tip of his finger in a slow, repetitive arc.
I fixated on his unconsciously erotic gesture. The bread became a pasty lump in my mouth. The room was too hot; perspiration beaded above my lip. I raised my eyes to his and we gazed at one another for a long, drawn-out moment while I wondered if he had even heard my question; I could barely remember it myself.
He finally looked away, taking a deep breath before answering. “Yes, that is true.”
What? What is true?
I cleared my throat, mentally grasping for the thread of the conversation. “I-I have traversed the route between the Isle of Man and Liverpool many times. I have never heard of an island in this region by that name.”
He shrugged. “You were blown off course by the storm. It is probably not on your regular route.”
“But surely I would have heard of it.” I leaned forward, grateful the conversation had finally turned toward the subject of the island. “The region is well traveled. An island big enough to support an estate this size must have ample land and tenant farmers. And a village, too?
Ynys Nos
must be very large indeed. As such, it would certainly be noted in local nautical charts.”
He gave me a cool smile. “Catherine, what are you asking? Do you think my island simply appears and disappears off the face of the Earth at will?” His amusement did not reach his eyes.
“Well, no, not exactly—”
“I am glad to hear it.” He lifted his wineglass to his lips. “One would hate to imagine the kind of dark magic at work if that were the case.”
He looked at me over the rim as he sipped his wine.
A chill rushed up my spine and unaccountably, I shivered. “Yes.” I frowned. “I suppose one would. If one believed in such things.”
He settled back in his chair, a hand resting lightly on the table, and yet his casual demeanor belied the tension in his posture. “You do not believe in dark magic?”
“Of course not,” I scoffed. “Or magic of any kind, for that matter. You, as a self-proclaimed man of science, must surely agree with me there.”
“‘There are more things in Heaven and Earth…’” he murmured, and swirled the bloodred liquid in his glass, staring thoughtfully into it.
I smiled. “Am I to play Horatio to your Hamlet, then?”
He glanced up at me. “I don’t think so. One could never mistake you for any kind of male. Especially not in that dress.”
He lifted his glass in a sort of salute, and I could feel the heat in my cheeks as I blushed furiously. I cursed the pale skin that constantly revealed my inner thoughts, despite my outward composure. My coloring—dark red hair, vivid green eyes, and light freckles sprinkled across pale-as-cream skin—harkened back to a sole Irish ancestor whose physical traits periodically reappeared in my family line despite our best efforts to breed them out.
“You do not accept compliments well, Catherine,” Gerard observed.
I touched my palms to my warm cheeks, then forced my hands down to my lap. “Such compliments have been rather rare of late, I am afraid.”
“What sort of society do you keep where the men are too thick to compliment a beautiful woman?”
He sounded outraged.
I had to laugh, the knot of tension between my shoulders easing. “Thank you. You are good for my ego.”
“You are welcome.” He stood. “Now, shall we walk off some of this prodigious meal and take ourselves to the library?”
“You have a library?” I exclaimed. Books were my most favorite of things.
“Yes. Of one thousand volumes, in fact, not to mention a collection of journals and papers. It was begun nearly three hundred years ago. I had the pleasure of enlarging the collection by several dozen volumes before…before we were cut off from the mainland. I would be my greatest pleasure to share it with you, Catherine. Come.”
I rose with him, feeling a little light-headed from the wine and the company. Pretending to ignore the dangerously exciting glint of the male predator in his eyes, I took the hand that he offered.
I would not relinquish his company just yet, no matter what my better sense told me. I was far from home and had been a woman living without a man for a very long time. As alien as he was to me, as female as he was male, I felt a sort of kinship with him regardless. He was as forlorn here on his remote island as I was on one peopled with society’s outcasts and rejects. He fascinated me, and while I wanted to know more about
Ynys Nos
, at the core of that desire, I realized now, was a need to know more about
him
.
Although I had not garnered a decent man’s attention for many years, in this isolated place, in this small breath between duty and responsibility, between what was and what was to come, I felt feminine and beautiful again…
And just a little bit dangerous myself.
Chapter Four
Gerard, preceded by another footman bearing the candles, led me to the library in a lazy stroll. I fitted my hand into the crook of his elbow and inhaled his scent with deep, secret breaths. It was not cologne, but rather an elemental essence that clung to him that I could not identify.
At one point, I stumbled and gripped his arm tighter as an excuse to move closer and draw in more of his intoxicating scent. Gerard looked at me with an amused smile, almost as if he knew the game I played with myself, and he pressed his hand over mine.
Eventually we arrived at the library door, but rather than allow the footman to accompany us, he directed the man to wait with the candles outside the door. The note of alarm sounding deep inside was quickly silenced by the warmth of his smile as he gestured for me to go first.
We entered in, alone.
The room surprised me. It did not mimic the spacious grandeur of the rest of the house, but was smaller and more intimate. As we stepped over the threshold, my host closed the door behind us. I stared anxiously at it, but he distracted me by drawing my attention to the rows of heavy bookcases lining the walls. The coolness of the air, the lack of windows, and the diamond-shaped wall sconces glowing from a hidden light source spaced at regular intervals also caught my eye. I gazed at him in question as I shivered and rubbed my hands along my arms.
Gerard plucked a woolen wrap from an overstuffed armchair and tucked it around my shoulders. “You must forgive the cold. These books are my most precious possessions. They connect me to the world. I take great lengths to preserve them from the humidity and sea air.”
He motioned to a decorative
trompe l’oeil of staked trellis vines winding around the room
that nearly hid a series of intricate pipe works imbedded along the walls. “I had this room built especially to house the library some time ago. I designed a system that brings water from an underground well to cool it, and the torches here are constantly lit to prevent mildew from breeding on the leather bindings. The sconces direct the flame and smoke back out into a funnel system which draws it away from the books, minimizing the chances of fire or smoke damage.”
“How clever! However did you get the idea?”
He shrugged. “I found the basic designs in an ancient Roman text. I made a few modifications, given materials available to me here, and found they worked quite well.” He smiled at me, and he looked almost shy. “You are the first person in many years to whom I have shown this room. I hope you will feel free to make use of it during your stay.”
I gazed up in awe at the bookshelves. I spotted several works of Shakespeare, Descartes, Pascal, religious poetry by Milton and Donne, a bound, water-spotted selection of the
Notes and Queries
journals, Latin texts, several notable editions of the Holy Scriptures, and so much more. Some of the more modern pieces showed obvious water damage, indicating their origins were likely from the shipwrecks Gerard had mentioned. Maps and geographies, botany texts, biographies, and novels, some with French, Italian, and German titles.
“I envy you your collection. It is astonishingly complete, given the circumstances. You must spend hours here.”
He reached out his hand to stroke the binding of one of the books. “My library has been my schoolroom, and these books my teachers. I think of their authors as companions on the voyage of life and my only true friends.”
I stared at his fingers as he caressed the slim, leather-bound volume. Hands had always fascinated me. Each pair told a story about its owners that could be read like the lines in a book. His were long and elegant, like a musician’s, the nails squared-off, a topographic map of veins faintly visible across the backs.
He pulled the volume from its resting place and handed it to me.
I read the binding. “Shakespeare’s sonnets.” I smiled up at him. “You will never believe it. A few years ago, I answered the gentlewoman Florence Nightingale’s call to nurse our army’s soldiers during Britain’s campaign in the Crimean Theater. I was able to take only a few books with me. The Holy Bible and the Sonnets were my favorites.”
“Why those two?”
“In the midst of war, I wanted something to remind me that love survives.”
“Ah.” He nodded as if he understood. “Agape and Eros. The love of God, and the love between a man and a woman.” He gazed down at me. “Your calling to serve in such circumstances astounds me. I would not have suspected such employment of a genteel woman as yourself. And your family, your friends…did they, ah, counsel you on these enterprises before you began?”
“They counseled me
against
it most strenuously, of course. But I do not regret my choices. Miss Nightingale has shown me how to be useful. No embroidered pillow or pretty watercolor can provide the sense of fulfillment that comes with helping a man regain his health.”
“Was it a difficult time for you?”
I remembered the sounds and smells of death, of the men groaning out their last breaths, crying for their mothers, begging to live, to die, the acrid smells of bodily waste as their bodies released their fluids in those final moments. I had needed a constant reminder of love when I watched what hatred had wrought.
In imitation of Gerard’s earlier gesture, I stroked the binding of the book I held. “It was difficult. So much suffering…”
He shook his head.
“I meant as a woman in a man’s world,” he said. “I do not trivialize the other, but it must have been difficult for you as a female in such a place, especially someone of your station. I cannot imagine it.”
I laid my palm across the sonnets and sighed. “Miss Nightingale had very high standards for the conduct of the nurses. A nurse who committed an indiscretion had to be sent home immediately, and we could not spare the hands. We were not to encourage any man’s attentions. It was for our own protection.”
“But you must have been so young and full of life. And newly widowed, from what I gather?”
“I was twenty-two when my husband died. Twenty-three when I joined Miss Nightingale.”
“And no one has told you that you are beautiful in all this time?” His voice was soft, low, and intimate.
I deflected his compliment with an attempt at wry humor. “Oh, lonely drunken soldiers, and even sober married doctors, will say many things to a woman in such a place. But as long as one has most of her teeth and lacks a hump, all females are beautiful when the bombs are bursting overhead.”
I laughed, but he did not join me, only looking at me with a strangely sad expression.
“It sounds as though you have been very lonely, Catherine.” He moved closer, his smoky gray eyes narrowing on my face, a lock of his coal black hair tumbling over one dark brow. “I understand loneliness.”
“I imagine you do,” I said faintly and took a step back, skittish, the bookcase behind me impeding further retreat. My heart fluttered.
He placed one hand on the bookshelf beside my head and stood so close his body heat enveloped me. I tore my eyes from his sensually full lower lip, trying to find a safer place to rest my gaze, but his sculpted cheekbones and sleepy, lush-lashed eyes proved to be even more troublesome views.
“How do you bear it?” he asked. “How do you keep from running mad with it?”
His voice echoed my own misery.
Who says I have not run mad already?
I hugged the book to my breast, concentrated on its gilt binding, its ragged edges. “I keep busy. I do not let my mind wander to places it cannot afford to go.”
“Such control,” he murmured.
“Thank you,” I whispered, keeping my head bent.
“It was not a compliment.”
That brought my head up, which I immediately regretted. He was too close, and I could not breathe.
“Control is a virtue,” I blurted, then steadied myself. “It is the mark of a disciplined mind, of-of a successful life. I do not hold with these romantic notions—”
He laid a finger across my lips. The gesture, in context, was as intimate as a kiss. My skin prickled with awareness, the drumming of my heart’s blood sounding heavy in my ears.
He slowly removed his finger, stroking across my mouth as he did so, his touch leaving a trail of sparking heat in its wake. “In you I see the sort of control one forces on a wild creature which is meant to roam free, a creature that will gnaw off its own leg in an effort to escape its captivity.”
I stared at him in astonished panic. How could he say such things to me?
He tugged the book from my hands when I would have used it as a shield between us, and laid it aside. His gaze roamed my face, memorizing every detail, every eyelash. Then he moved closer, until no more than a breath of space separated our bodies, and leaning down, whispered into my ear as if he was telling me a secret. “We are cut from the same cloth, you and I. We pretend to others, of necessity, to be what we are not, until we nearly believe it ourselves. But inside…”
“Inside?” I asked, the word quivering in the air.
“Inside, our emotions flow like lava. Dangerous. Scalding.
Unstoppable
.” His warm breath feathered against my cheek, stirring a strand of my hair against it. His voice rumbled; I could feel it in my entire body.
I made a sound deep in my throat and bit it back. I felt liquid and hot, like the lava he described. I pressed my shoulders against the bookcase. “I
-
I am not like that. I am English.”
His laugh mocked me, as well it should have. I was ridiculous and defenseless, hopelessly out of my depth.
He gazed down at me, his height blocking the light, his face in shadow. “Yes,” he drawled, “so English. With your creamy skin and rebellious freckles. With your cool eyes and fiery hair. So full of contrasts. You are like an English rose hiding a set of wicked, wicked thorns.” He moved his other hand to the shelf beside my waist, inches away, but still he did not touch me.
“Would you prick me, Catherine,” he whispered, “if I reached for you? If your thorns drew blood, would you tend my wounds?”
The breath caught in my throat. His tongue flicked out, wetting that deliciously sinful lower lip, and his head bent toward me. Galvanized, I shoved hard at the arm that hemmed me in, freeing myself from his near embrace. I spun away from him, ashamed and aroused all at once.
“Don’t.” The word escaped me, the panicked confusion behind it obvious.
He leaned languidly against the bookcase, his expression challenging and yet innocent. “Don’t what?”
What was I doing?
I took a step back, my hands cold with the knowledge of what I had very nearly allowed. I could barely stomach the thought that while the children were about to be thrown out on the streets—might even be there now, starving and afraid and vulnerable—I had been flirting with a man I hardly knew, oblivious to my responsibilities. I could not forgive myself.
I touched the cameo with its dual images beneath my bodice. “I would like to go back to my room, please.”
“I would be delighted to escort you,” he said with a sultry smile.
I stiffened. “Alone.”
My behavior tonight must have given him the idea I might be willing. This had seemed a harmless flirtation to me, but I should have known better. Gerard was anything but harmless.
I straightened my back. His was not the first proposition I had ever received. I must stop behaving like a schoolgirl.
“Gerard, if I have given you any indication I am the sort of woman who would—would allow liberties on such a short acquaintance, forgive me. Men have all sorts of ideas about widows, but I must correct any such impressions at once.” I put a hand to my forehead, damp with perspiration even in this cool air, and dabbed at it. “I am not myself. Blame it on my ordeal or on the wine, if you wish, but let this incident never be spoken of again.”
He folded his arms over his chest. “What incident? We only talked of books and nature. I see no harm done.”
I looked at him, bewildered. Had I been the only one affected by the emotions in this room?
He moved toward me, and I hastily stepped back, but he only reached to open the door behind me as he walked past. “I will have my servant escort you to your room. We cannot have you getting lost along the way.”
Relief poured through me. I removed the wool wrap from my shoulders.
He took it from me and returned it to its original location. “I will come to you again tomorrow night.”
“Do not trouble yourself.” At this point, I thought it best to break the pattern of intimacy that we seemed to have fallen into. “I believe I shall rise early and walk to the village tomorrow morning to investigate it. And I will have supper in my room.”
He motioned for the footman to attend me. “You will do neither of those things unaccompanied. If you wish to see the village, Mrs. Jones can take you in the carriage with two footmen. It is advisable to always have someone with you.” He took my hand then and bowed over it. When he rose, those knowing gray eyes gleamed. “And I would not miss another meal like this one for the world.” He released me, and turning on his heel, strode away.
Troubled, I watched him withdraw, wondering how he could see in the dark corridor to find his way without a candle or a torch. But of course this was his home, and he’d lived here most of his life. He would know it well enough to traverse it in the dark.
What troubled me more was why Gerard insisted I needed the guardianship of two footmen
and
Mrs. Jones to attend me when I visited the village.
And while I made my way back to my room to be locked in, I wondered if my assigned phalanx’s main purpose was not to protect me from the villagers but to serve as an effective barrier between what
I
wished to know about
Ynys Nos
, and what
Gerard
wished for me to know.