It was James who looked around after a while and said
breathlessly, "We'd better get back to your bedroom."
Honoria adjusted her askew spectacles and responded
practically as she took his hand, "There are over thirty bedrooms in
Lacey House. We simply have to find the nearest one."
Honoria slipped out of bed and into a robe without waking James.
Dawn was just breaking and she walked out onto her balcony to
look down on the neatly tended gardens below. A maze of
blooming rose bushes was laid out beneath her bedroom. Bright
color and heady aroma filled her senses even though she could not
make out details without her spectacles. She wasn't quite sure
where she'd left her glasses this time, and didn't much care. Huseby
would find them, and Honoria had several spare pairs. Maggie had
arrived from London yesterday and put herself in charge of picking
up all of Honoria's and James's dropped and misplaced items.
Honoria was not sure how many times they had made love, or
in how many places in the last twenty-four hours. She shook her
head as she curled her hands around the balcony banister and tried
to work up a sense of chagrin. She had sore muscles and was
seriously under-slept. She was starving, and wanted a long, hot
bath. But all these were physical reactions to what she'd been doing
with her husband. She was also deeply, deeply satisfied, physically
and mentally. She searched for a sense of shame within herself, but
could find none.
She smiled out at the dawn and spread her arms wide to the
world. The rose scented breeze blew coolly across her skin, teasing
tender nipples to hardness beneath the thin turquoise silk of her
robe. When James came to stand behind her, naked as the day he
was born, she leaned back against his sturdy body. He put his arms
around her and she tilted her head back against his shoulder.
"Come inside," he said. "It's cold."
She smiled at this reminder that he was a creature of the
sunny Mediterranean. "It's a beautiful morning."
"Which in England means it isn't raining."
"You are always so grumpy before you've had your morning
coffee." He only held her tighter. She paused for a moment, then
added, "I, on the other hand, am always grumpy."
"It's one of your chief attractions for me," he responded, and
drew her backward off the balcony. He shut the glass door behind
them, to keep the mild air out and the warmth in, she supposed.
"Shall I ring for breakfast?" she asked.
He kissed her and ran his hands over her body, sliding the
silk erotically over her skin. "I'm hungry," he said, after she was
quite mad with desire. He picked her up and tossed her back on the
bed, then he jumped on top of her.
Sometime later, warm and content with the afterglow of
passion, she tried again. "Breakfast?"
"Mmmm."
She nudged his shoulder. "I'll take that for a yes, why don't
I?"
She started to get up to ring for a servant, but his hand shot
out to grasp her wrist. "We need to talk," he said when she turned
curiously to look at him.
Oh, no
, she thought.
We most certainly do not
. Her blood ran
cold at the very thought of conversation. She did not want to
communicate in any way other than through touch and taste and the
other senses. For the first time in years she was free of anger,
resentment, and repression. She did not want to analyze, she
wanted to live! She was out of control, and perfectly happy to stay
that way. "I'm happy," she said. "Leave me alone."
"You don't want to hear what has to be said."
She nodded emphatically. "Precisely."
He sat up, and they sat on the green satin bedspread, cross-
legged, facing each other. His look of concern disturbed her. He
reached over and ran his fingers through her tangled hair, spreading
it out like a copper blanket over her shoulders.
"You've been asking me why since we met again. Don't you
want the answer?"
She shook her head. "I don't need answers."
He bent forward, peering at her from an inch away. "Excuse
me, madam, but I seem to be in bed with a stranger."
She bent back and pulled on her discarded robe. "You're here.
That's enough."
"It would not be enough for my Honoria." He put his hands
on her shoulders. She, who had become so very pliable, stiffened
beneath his touch. He did not ask what was wrong. He said, "Ah,
that's better."
She was not amused. "I hate being like this! I hate always
having to think. To watch what I feel and do and say! If we start
talking now, we'll argue, and I'll hate you for only marrying me out
of duty—because that's what you want to explain to me—and then
I'll go all cold and hard and turn into
her
again!" She sounded
foolish and childish and did not care. She was so very sick and tired
of being mature. She was so very—tired.
He pulled her into a warm, tender embrace and they settled
down on the bed, lying face to face. He brushed hair out of her
face, and tears from her cheeks. "I like you all tart and testy," he
told her. "I love your wit and intellect. I don't want to lose those
parts of you."
"What does love have to do with duty?" she asked, curious
for an explanation despite having denied wanting one. She had a
mind that wasn't good at not thinking, even if she wanted to escape
that part of herself.
"Everything," he answered. "Though I didn't realize they
were one and the same until sometime yesterday morning." He
continued to stroke her cheek with the pad of his thumb. She found
it very soothing. "It is a long and complicated story."
"You've said that before."
"You know my parents' history," he said after a few
moments. "How they lost each other during the Battle of
Talavares? They set a very good example to me about honor and
duty and the strength of love."
"I can see that, but what has that to do with—"
"My own life took a very bizarre turn. Even more bizarre
than their story."
"Thank you," she said tartly. "I enjoy being referred to as
'bizarre.' "
He smiled. "That's my Honoria. I did try to forget you, you
know."
"As I tried to forget you," she conceded. "I failed miserably."
"As did I. I escaped from Algiers disguised as an English
sailor. I had a small chest of gold and jewels that I managed to take
out of my house with us… along with a certain book." He grinned
wickedly.
She flashed him a smile in return. "I do not have the decency
to blush, James, so you might as well go on with your tale."
"What I brought with me was nothing compared to what I
would have claimed if I'd gotten to Ibrahim Rais's treasure."
"Sorry about that."
He managed to shrug while lying down. "What I truly wanted
was the silver scimitar. It was rightfully mine; the rest was corsair
plunder. But what mattered most was your safety. After that, I
concentrated on returning to my mother and providing for her."
"You never thought to search for your father?" She put her
hand on James's chest, directly over his heart. She hadn't noticed
before, but she realized that her leg was thrown over his. She
needed to be touching him, even when she wasn't aware of doing
so.
He put his hand on the curve of her hip. "I assumed he was
dead. It never occurred to me to claim my English heritage. Then,
one day, on a day when I was roaring drunk," he added, a faint
blush coloring his cheeks, "this Englishman showed up at our
tavern and claimed to be Edward Marbury, my father. I wouldn't
have believed him if my mother hadn't rushed into his arms. They
were happy; I went on being drunk. And whoring. And brawling,"
he added unapologetically. "I was empty inside," he went on, his
eyes full of pain and regret. She touched his cheek, and he kissed
the back of her hand. "I missed you."
"Did you? Why?" She was genuinely curious. "I mean, after
all those years… all those women…"
"Women who weren't you."
"Hmmph."
"It's true. Why is it that
you
didn't marry? Was it because you
missed me?"
"No. It was because both you and Derrick betrayed me."
After a moment, she added, "It was also because I knew I could
never make love to anyone but you. I suppose you are infinitely
smug to hear such a confession?"
"Infinitely. But I didn't think I'd betrayed you: I thought he'd
married you. That you were happy in England, with lots of babies."
"He threw me over the first moment he could when we were
out of Algiers. I had been compromised in the eyes of society, as
far as he was concerned. He thought that even though I was the
daughter of a duke, my soiled reputation would jeopardize his
career. Bloody fool didn't seem to recall that I could buy him the
Admiralty! His breaking the engagement did start rumors about me,
and tainted me in the eyes of the
ton
. The rumors were quite true,
of course, but for my father's sake, I went on pretending to be a
paragon of propriety."
"And for my father's sake I began a quest to find the young
woman I seduced and abandoned—his words, not mine."
"Really?" she asked sarcastically. "I thought you thought I
was happily married."
"Malaga is a port town," he told her, "and Captain Russell's
ship put in at the harbor a few months ago. I found out through an
acquaintance—a very nice lady of the evening—that she knew for a
fact that Captain Russell was not married. In fact, my friend—"
"I thought you said she was an acquaintance."
He ignored her jealous tone. "He wanted my friend to come
to England to be his mistress. But he told her that he needed to find
a rich wife first, so that he could afford to support a mistress
properly."
She laughed softly, without rancor. "That's my Derrick."
"He won't be anyone's Derrick much longer," James
promised grimly. "I was angry enough to kill him when I heard that
he hadn't married you, but his ship had left Malaga by the time I
heard the story. I didn't know what to think, or do. I thought that
perhaps you'd been happily married to the lout and died in
childbirth. It happens. But my lady friend was certain he'd never
been married at all. I knew then that he'd abandoned you, and that
letting you go with him was the biggest mistake I'd ever made."
"So you then romantically ran off to England to look for
me?" she asked eagerly.
He shook his head. "I nearly ran off in a blind rage to find
you, but my father had a better plan, and I listened to him." He
touched the tip of her nose, then kissed it. Her eyes crossed as she
watched his lips come toward her. "But not until after he made me
into a proper English gentleman. My father is very convincing in
the matters of duty and obligation. He insisted I owed it to the
woman I had seduced and abandoned to find her and make amends,
and practically dragged me by the ear to London to start the search
once I was polished enough to fit into society."
Honoria had gone tense; there was a bruised tenderness about
her. The confident, teasing young woman of the last two days had
been replaced by the wary creature he'd help make her into. But
wary, hurt or not, he owed her the truth. He went on, though the
very air around them seemed to darken and become more chill with
each word. "In my own way I was as hurt as you were. I had
survived life under Ibrahim Rais, but was still lost and soul-weary
when I returned to Malaga. I had nothing to live for, and a great
deal of guilt on my conscience. I did many evil things as a corsair,
even though I did them reluctantly. I did not even return with the
one thing I had earned. My father suggested that if I tracked down
Honoria Pyne and married her, then I would have at least made
reparations for some of my sins. I had his example of spending his
life finding my mother. I admired him, and wanted his approval. It
was my duty."
"You found Lady Alexandra instead." Her voice was so soft
and colorless he barely heard it.
He nodded. "I felt like a fool, but a vow is a vow. I was
determined to marry you."
"A fool. Of course."