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Authors: Helen Dickson

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BOOK: Destitute On His Doorstep
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‘With you?'

‘I'm afraid so. Unless…' he smiled lazily, mocking her with her own words ‘…you insist on leaving, since you have an aversion to residing under the same roof as a Roundhead.'

Jane stared at him, wishing she were not confined to bed so she could strike out at him. ‘I am sorry to impose on you. I can imagine how my presence must inconvenience you. I shall do my best to get well and be out of here as soon as I am able.'

Francis met her angry gaze with an amused smile, momentarily awed by her eyes as they caught a stray shaft of light penetrating a crack in the heavy curtains. For the moment they looked so dark as to be almost black, emphasising the redness of the ugly rash that marred her lovely face. With some difficulty he dragged his mind to full attention. He knew she was feeling most unwell and upset and pondered how he might soothe her fears.

‘You do not inconvenience me, Mistress Lucas. My only concern is for your state of health and your welfare,' he assured her on a softer note. ‘You are welcome to remain as my guest for as long as you wish.'

‘Thank you. I am indeed grateful,' she uttered tightly. ‘But it is a strange feeling to be treated as a guest in my own home.'

‘I hope you will continue to treat it as such while you are here,' he replied, ignoring her sarcasm. ‘I had quite a struggle getting you up here. If nothing else, I'm glad to see your temper has improved.'

‘My temper? Why—did I object when…?'

‘You did. The language you used would have made a seaman blush.'

‘I—I didn't…'

‘Yes, you did—is that not so, Mary?'

From across the room where the housekeeper busied
herself, she nodded. ‘I'm afraid she always was too outspoken for her own good.'

‘Why, what did I say?'

A crooked smile accompanied his reply. ‘You have an unladylike turn of phrase, I will say that. I have been a soldier for a good many years, Mistress Lucas, and never have I been more slandered—or my parentage for that matter—nor in such colourful detail. Quite frankly, I was shocked.'

Twin spots of colour grew in her cheeks, but the dim light and the rash did much to hide her blush. ‘Oh, I did not. I think you exaggerate.'

‘And how would you know that? You were delirious. In fact, if I hadn't thought you might be close to death, I would have been thoroughly entertained.'

‘I've never been ill before—at least, not really ill. Not like this.'

His smiling eyes captured hers and held them prisoner until she felt a warmth suffuse her cheeks. He answered with slow deliberation. ‘Then consider yourself fortunate to have excellent health. Some people are not as lucky. In someone with a less robust constitution, a severe bout of the measles can be fatal. How are you feeling now?'

‘As bad as I look.' She smiled, her expression open and direct. ‘I apologise for not looking my best.'

Francis marvelled at the fact that she could actually joke about it, which gave him the impression that pretensions were completely foreign to her, which made her refreshingly unique. Unfortunately that realisation led quickly to another one, one that banished his pleasure at her recovery and made him take a step back from the bed. There was nothing natural about the way he was
thinking about her. He was the last man on earth who had the right to think about her in any personal way.

‘I can see you are tired. I'll leave you to Mary's ministrations. And please don't worry. So as not to upset or anger you, I shall make myself scarce.' He turned and went to the door.

‘Thank you,' Jane said quietly.

Francis turned and looked at her. ‘For what?'

Those candid eyes were levelled on his, delving, searching, and Francis had the fleeting impression that they could see right into his blackened soul. She obviously hadn't got his true measure because she smiled and said, ‘For letting me stay.'

‘You were very ill. I was hardly going to turn you out.'

Jane was very much on Francis's mind as he left her. The shadow of the dark days of War and his own personal torment were never far from his tortured mind. War and death was an ugly business, the aftermath of battle always messy and merciless. No matter how he had tried to eradicate what he had seen and done from his mind, it had left its mark on him. Like a wound it was painful, deep and festering. War had hardened him and changed the man he once was, but on that fateful day when Jane Lucas had returned to Bilborough, for the first time he had paused to contemplate his meaningless life.

Something had begun to grow within him. At first it was only a vague restlessness, then it had become interest—interest in Jane Lucas. Had he imagined it? Was it a dream that he had conjured from the depths of hopelessness that Jane Lucas had actually returned to
her old home? The haunting image of soft, perfect features and rippling dark hair swirling around her shoulders, and ripe, curving breasts swelling almost free of a provocative red gown was branded on his memory with minute detail, stirring an agonising impatience that could only be relieved when he could hold her in his arms.

In increasing frustration he flung himself on to his bed. Was it possible that where Jacob Atkins's brutality had failed, the illusion of Jane Lucas came close to breaking him? In desperation he held the vision, for when it faded it would be replaced by a gruesome one of a dimly lit room, of being beaten and slowly tortured by a one-eyed sadist.

 

True to his word Francis kept away, but he did enquire of Mary how Jane was doing. Wearily Jane knew he did so probably out of duty or an unexpected pity, or guilt that he had been the catalyst of the whole sorry business.

Now the fever was gone she was restless and insisted on getting out of bed. After four days the measles rash had turned brown and began to fade, but her cough, though not as severe, persisted.

One week after she had taken to her bed, the world still felt unreal. When she thought of the future a sudden fear threatened to engulf her. However, she was relieved there was no word, no sign of Jacob Atkins.

The hardest and most painful thing of all was accepting that Bilborough Hall was no longer her home. She begrudged Francis Russell every stone and blade of grass, every fraction of his unearned possession, and she never expected to feel any different.

 

It was early afternoon and she sat by the window curled up in a large chair, her feet tucked under her nightgown and feeling pretty miserable. Nothing stirred outside the window and the house was quiet. Leaving her perch, she paced the room. Intense boredom was beginning to drive her insane. Crossing to the door, she opened it and peered out, looking up and down the landing, vaguely aware of Scamp scurrying out and disappearing round a corner, delighted to be freed from the confines of the room. Immediately on the heels of his flight, something rattled and crashed to the floor.

Wondering what her mischievous pet had sent flying, she hurried to investigate. Her curiosity went unappeased, for as she turned the corner she came to a mind-jarring halt against an obstacle firmly standing in her path. The following moments became a time of utter chaos. With dazed senses, she reeled away haphazardly. The threat of falling seemed imminent as her bare foot slipped on the highly polished floor. In the next instant, an arm stretched out and clamped about her waist in an unyielding vise. Before she could gather her wits, she was swept full length against a solid human structure that, by rights, should have made her hackles rise. The thin fabric of her nightgown seemed insufficient protection against the stalwart frame, and she had cause to wince within the unyielding embrace of the man who clasped her so tightly.

In an attempt to regain her dignity, immediately she pushed him away, relieved when he let his arms fall and released her. Upon reclaiming her freedom, she stepped away from him, only to find that the object Scamp had
overturned was a large vase of flowers, the water having formed a pool around her feet. She slipped once more and found herself completely off balance, her arms flailing wildly about her in a frantic attempt to catch hold of something to stop herself falling. The only thing within her grasp was the front of the leather jerkin the man was wearing and in desperation she clutched at it. Even then she failed to regain her footing and as she went down her shoulder made hard contact with Colonel Russell's loins.

Immediately he choked from her assault. Unfortunately Jane's disgrace was not complete, for as she slid down his hard-muscled thighs and fell at his feet with a bump, her legs went in different directions and her nightgown rode up above her knees. It was difficult to know who was the more shocked or who winced more from the fiasco.

Silently reproaching herself for her clumsiness, carefully Jane sought to regain her modesty. She scrambled to sit upright, bringing her legs together. Upon achieving that position, she pulled her nightgown down as she sought to hide the bare flesh from his eyes.

‘I'm so sorry,' she uttered, shoving the heavy mane of her hair from her face as she tried to conceal her mortification and distress, hot colour mounting her cheeks. ‘My dog doesn't like being shut in, but I can't have him leaping about all over the place, as you see, for he seems to have knocked over a vase, and—'

‘Never mind,' Francis managed to say, the tendons in his face taut as he fairly struggled to surmount his manly discomfort. Reaching out, he took her arm and pulled her up, his arm going round her waist once again
as he set her on her feet. Her hair, which he realised had a life and direction of its own, was tumbling about her neck and down her back.

Jane caught a vague scent of the cologne he wore, mingled with an underlying smell of leather and horses. The scent was pleasant and provocative and floated tantalisingly through her senses. A painful grimace was evidence of Colonel Russell's continued discomfort, tightening his chiselled features as he endured the torment.

In complete innocence, Jane enquired, ‘Is anything wrong? Did I hurt you when I fell?'

To her shock he smiled at her enquiry, a slow, seductive, secretive smile that made his eyes gleam beneath their heavy lids. Jane was far too naïve to recognise the nuances of it, or she would have seen peril lurking behind that come-hither smile of his. It was the dangerously beguiling smile of a ruthless predator—a predator who wanted her to sense his power, his defiance of any who stood in his path, and to be seduced by what he represented.

‘Just a bit,' he replied, diligently adjusting his trousers at the waist.

Realising too late what had happened, Jane let a breathless gasp escape her throat and she suffered an endless moment of excruciating embarrassment. The maidenly blush that mantled her cheeks deepened. Purposefully she focused her gaze on the upper part of his chest. It seemed the only way she could marshal her thoughts. Her response to his closeness was as unwanted as it was lightning quick. She felt a hot pull of attraction deep inside that could not lead to any good.

In the midst of his chiselled features and dark blue eyes, now thankfully devoid of pain, at least enough to convey some evidence of humour, strong white teeth as perfect as any Jane had ever seen appeared in a wayward grin. Feeling as if she were being drawn into a snare, for a moment she found herself susceptible to his appeal.

‘Worry not,' he murmured, leisurely observing her beauty to his heart's content, making no effort to curb his amused, all-too-confident grin. ‘To see you thus and hold you close—to share such a moment—was well worth it.'

The warmly mellow tones of his voice were imbued with a rich quality that seemed to vibrate through Jane's whole being. But his casual statement ignited her temper. ‘Share? We did not
share
anything,' she railed at him. Accustomed as she was to the admiring glances of gentlemen, there was nothing gentlemanly about this man's insolent, lazy perusal of her body. ‘Are you quite finished?' she asked tersely, very nearly slipping again as she took a step back. Laughing deep and shaking his head in chiding reproof, reaching out he took her elbow, but she jerked it free. ‘Don't you dare touch me again, you—you buffoon,' she shrieked.

His unhurried gaze lifted to her eyes and a wry smile quirked his lips when he heard the outrage in her voice. ‘That's quite a temper you have,' he said, meeting her furious glare with glowing, wicked eyes. ‘I am surprised to find you wandering about my house in your night attire. I would like to think you might be looking for me.'

‘Why, you—you conceited jackanapes! I most cer
tainly was not. I merely came to see what scrape my dog had got itself into.'

His amusement dwindled to a slanted smile, but a teasing light still danced in his eyes. ‘Is that all? Then I am disappointed.' He shrugged casually, openly savouring the delectable details of her womanly curves, admiring her intriguingly round, delicately hued breasts, and remembering how sleek her limbs were—far more admirable than any he had ever seen—fully aware of his responding body. ‘Little did I imagine when I first saw you that I'd be so completely vexed by my desire for you. You can't blame me for hoping you were looking for me—now can you, Jane?—and in a state of undress. I have to say you flaunt yourself with such grace and style the mere sight of you stirs my blood.'

‘Flaunt?' she cried in outrage, thoroughly incensed by his audacity to accuse her of enticement. ‘You lecher. I am guilty of no such thing and you know it.' Her brow arched at a sceptical angle. ‘Am I to understand that you are soliciting me for my favours?'

‘I would not insult you by doing so,' he answered lightly, trying to make his words sound convincing while offering no apology for allowing his gaze to ogle her so blatantly. ‘The sights are much too enticing for any man to ignore. If you must know, I enjoy looking at you as much as I like looking at any beautiful woman.'

Aware of the fact that he really was grinning like some hopeful lecher as his gaze lingered overlong on her breasts, belying his words, Jane crossed her arms over her chest in a protective manner. The audacity of the man! Her dark eyes narrowed as she fixed a malevolent
glare upon him. ‘You are far too bold and too sure of yourself. Have you no shame?'

BOOK: Destitute On His Doorstep
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