Soldier of Fortune: The King's Courtesan (Rakes and Rogues of the Retoration Book 2) (35 page)

BOOK: Soldier of Fortune: The King's Courtesan (Rakes and Rogues of the Retoration Book 2)
10.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Now the talk from everyone is that she’s barren,” Peg continued with breathless excitement.

“But she’s only been married five months!” Hope protested.

They talked a while longer and Peg invited her to come to the Duke’s Theater, where she was performing that night. It would be a chance to make connections and renew old acquaintances, but she was lonely for something else this night. She gave her a hug and promised to visit soon, and then took the boat that traveled along the river to the new spring gardens in Vauxhall. It would be closed for the season by the end of the week, and she needed to feel as though she were back in the country this night.

Venus rose above her and muddy water churned beneath as the skies slowly darkened overhead. She was the goddess to whom lovers made their wishes, and Hope’s heart whispered,
I want Robert. The dark and the light. I want him to love me. I want to go home.

The boat bumped gently to a halt by the river gate. There was a gentle swell of music and the sounds of laughter and gaiety coming from beyond the stairs. She entered into an enchanted world filled with shopkeepers, courtiers and families with their children. They jostled in an excited mix, dancing and flirting, listening to harpists and fiddlers, enjoying cakes and powdered beef, or dining on white-draped tables. She smiled as she moved among them, determined to put her worries behind her and let this beautifully crafted fantasy soften her night.

She wandered fairy lit avenues and gravel paths lined with trees burnished gold by the lanterns swaying from their branches. Here was a quiet alcove next to a burbling fountain, and there a glade filled with dancing and light. Magicians and jugglers entertained, thrushes sang from the bushes and and the sky overhead was a starry dome. It was beautiful...magical...yet she had no one to share it and it and though surrounded by people she felt very much alone.

As she passed a darkened grotto well hidden by the trees a strong arm suddenly encircled her waist and a rough hand covered her mouth, cutting off her scream. She bit it, drawing blood as her cursing captor dragged her kicking and clawing into the bushes.

“God’s blood, Hope! Sheath your claws and loosen your fangs. You’re worse than your bloodthirsty kitten. Where in hell have you been? I’ve been searching for you for four bloody days! I’d begun to think some harm had befallen you.”

“Robert?” She looked up at him, stunned. It was as if her thoughts had conjured him from the air.

He growled in response, examining his injuries as best he could in the moonlight. “You’ve left me with more scars in this one night than in all my years of fighting. It stings like the very devil.” He held his hand out to show her the wound.

“Well, you shouldn’t have snuck up and grabbed me like that!” Her body shook with shock and fear but also excitement and she didn’t forget to send a silent thank-you to whomever had answered her prayer.

They stood, awkward and uncertain, just inches apart.

“You shouldn’t have been standing on a darkened path at nighttime. It’s dangerous. Any fool walking by might mistake you for a common strumpet.”

“Perhaps that’s why I’m here.”

His lips twisted with annoyance. “I understand I’ve made you angry. I know I’ve disappointed you. But we’re both well past pretending to be something we’re not.”

“You mean brave when I’m frightened? Cold when my heart is breaking? What choice do I have? It’s my only armor. What did you pretend?”

“I pretend…I pretended...the very same.”

“I saw you, Robert. I saw what you can do. What could possibly frighten you?”


You
do. I’ve been frightened from the moment I told Charles that I would marry you. I was watching you from the trees as you danced. I was so entranced I didn’t hear his approach. As soon as I said yes I knew that I would love you, and I feared what might happen if you knew about me. I never wanted you to know that part of my life but you kept insisting. I never wanted you to see me like that....”

“But you came.”

“I told you I would.” He reached out to tuck a stray curl behind her ear and she was in his arms. He hugged her tight against his length and threaded his fingers through her hair, drawing her into a gentle kiss.

“I want you to love me, Robert,” she breathed against his lips.

He gave her a crooked smile. “Every time I see you my heart skips a beat. Every time I kiss you it thrills me like the first time and moves me like it was the last. I
do
love you, Hope. I’ve been cold and alone so long it had become a habit. You came into my life and warmed me like the sun. I think I had almost forgotten how to feel. You mean everything. I’m sorry if I haven’t let you know it. I think I’m so unused to it I don’t know how. Oakes say’s I’m not very good with people and—”

“Hush.” Hope gripped him by his coat just below the collar and raised on her toes to kiss him back.

He tightened his embrace and lifted her off her feet, walking backwards, deep into a secluded green-space protected by a dense wall of bushes and trees. He sank to his knees, pulling her down with him, kissing her face, her lips, her throat. They fumbled at their clothing, tugging and pulling, hungry and impatient as he pressed her to the ground.

“Good Christ,” he murmured, raising on his elbows. “I’ve missed you that much, elf. If we don’t stop soon I’ll take you here and now.”

Her eyes were alight with joy and mischief. “Don’t stop, Robert. I swear there’s magic afoot. I wished for you tonight and now here you are.”

He needed no further encouragement. His hands roamed her surface, rough and demanding, tugging at her skirts, bunching the material and rasping it across her belly.

Pressing her everywhere with hot sweet kisses he traveled slowly up her body to claim her burning lips. Her lips parted with a sigh and he stroked and tasted, his kiss an act of possession and wild caress.

Moaning and tangled they rolled in the grass until he straddled her. Her eyes were luminous like the sky above them, seeming to mirror all the mystery and magic of wild glades and soft nights. She reached out a hand and laid it flat on his chest, feeling the steady pulse of life beneath. “You are no dream,” she whispered. “But you bring my dreams to life.”

He gathered her warmth beneath him, his rampant arousal straining hard against the juncture of her thighs. And then he entered her, slow and deliberate, savoring the moment, not as conqueror or supplicant, rescuer or rescued, but as someone who, after years in the wilderness, had found his way home. She bucked against him, urging him deeper, each movement pulling him further into a soul-searing embrace. Never had the sky blazed with such majesty. No bed had been softer than the grass beneath her. No birdsong had ever sounded as sweet. She held power and life and love in her arms and the world throbbed with color and everything pulsed with life. Robert thrust inside her with the same urgent rhythm and she squeezed him tight as her spasms of pleasure melded with his in a blissful ancient bond. With a final sigh they fell back together in a tangled sated heap.

“Well!” he said when he’d caught his breath, “We ought to do that every night I think, don’t you?” His voice was hopeful.

Cuddled in his arms, she gave his ear a playful nip. “Every time is new with you. I feel things I’d never imagined before. You take me places, Robert that…I’ve no words to describe it.”

“Have I redeemed myself, then?” he asked as he combed his fingers through her hair.

“I haven’t decided yet. You gave me such a scare. Do you think anyone heard us?” She sounded curious rather than worried and he chuckled and ruffled her hair.

“They might have heard my howl of pain.” He held out his mangled hand for her inspection. “Look at how it’s swollen. I expect it’s all infected now. I pray I don’t lose my sword hand.”

She gasped in horror, taking it gently, and gave it several little kisses. “We’ll see a surgeon straight away. I’m sorry, Robert! I had no idea it was you.”

He reached for his discarded coat and tucked it around her like a blanket. “I’m teasing you. I’ve survived many an injury far worse than this. With the proper wifely care and attention I’m sure that I’ll be fine.”

“How on earth did you find me?”

“It wasn’t easy, and there might have been some magic involved. I remembered your fascination with gardens and flowers. I have been to Hyde Park, Saint James Park, the gardens at Whitehall, to every damned garden I could find asking strangers if they’d seen an elfin beauty with midnight hair and violet eyes. Did you know there are two gardens here? An old one and a new one, though this is deemed the better. I was offered blondes, brunettes, and redheads—of every talent and description, but no one had seen you. It’s sheer luck I found you tonight. Were you hiding?”

“No. Yes. I needed time to think.”

“It’s over. With Harris.”

“You killed him?”

“No. I couldn’t do it without harming the boy. I couldn’t after seeing you. I hated that you saw me that way and suddenly it all seemed so senseless and stupid. It wasn’t going to bring Caroline back but it might have cost me you. I don’t want to live in the past, Hope. I want to have a life and future with you. My life had little meaning until you came along and I knew if I lost you it never would again.”

He took her hand and kissed her fingers, then held up a tiny band of woven grass. “Hope Mathews, I’ve never been in love before. I’m likely to make lots of mistakes. I expect if you agree to stay with me you’ll have to be quite patient. But I do try and listen and I want to learn. So if you cannot feel free or happy with me, then I will do my best to help you to wherever you wish to be. But I know you now, and you know me, and I would ask you, given free heart and free will…would you marry me?”

Laughing through her tears she shoved him over onto his back and held out her hand. “I am
exactly
where I wish to be, foolish man. I want to see my ring.”

He slipped it on her finger and pulled her in to a tender kiss. Sometime later Hope nuzzled the sensitive spot behind his ear. “What does Oakes know? A good deal less than you I expect. He has eyes for Mrs. Overton and doesn’t even know it. Trust me, Robert.” She folded her arms on his chest and rested her chin on her hands. “You are very, very,
very
good with women.”

 

 

 

CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE

 

 

Lord and Lady Nichols wandered through a stately bedchamber crowded with books and paper, curiosities and ticking clocks.

“So this is his room?”

“Yes.” Hope blushed furiously but she needn’t have worried. Robert never felt intimidated or doubted his prowess in any arena when it came to other men.

She watched as he fiddled with a telescope. His fascination with it made her smile. Perhaps she would present him with one at New Year’s. She could picture him using it on dark summer nights on the terrace. It struck her that she didn’t even know when his birthday was. There was so much about him to learn. She knew what was important, though, and that was that she loved him.

“Look you here, Hope!” He was standing over a mechanical automaton of otters catching fish.

She came over and leaned against his shoulder, nodding her head, trying to look suitably impressed while wondering why such silly toys made grown men act like boys. “Does it ever seem strange to you how we were brought together?”

“You mean the parade?”

“That and other things.”

“Well, the whole night at Pall Mall seemed strange to me, starting with your hall of mirrors.”

“But think of it, Robert. I was hardly likely to ever go to Nottingham, or you to come backstage at the theatre.”

“Ah! I see what you say. You wonder how fate conspired to join us a second time.”

“Exactly!”

“Well,” he mused, “if one thinks of you as Cinderella, then Charles would be your fairy godmother. He clothed you for the ball and settled you in a fine coach, though you lost
both
slippers.” They both broke into laughter.

“His scepter is a magic wand!” she cried.

“And Castlemaine an evil stepsister! Let’s hope he’s not annoyed and turns us both back into pumpkins.”

“Why don’t you ask him yourselves, my dears? He is standing right behind you. I believe you mean country bumpkin, Captain.”

Hope’s face looked almost comical in its surprise while Robert’s was merely assessing. Charles couldn’t help a grin. “Your husband is very big, Lady Nichols. One notices more when he stands behind you. Are you still angry with me for choosing him?”


I
have chosen him, Charles.” She held out her hand, proudly showing off her woven ring. “In the end
that
is all that matters.”

“And if I strip your handsome giant of his lands?”

“We are a talented pair, Your Majesty.” Robert stepped in. “I’ll still have my sword, and my wife will design gardens.”

“Gardens, you say!” The king barked with laughter. “Charles. Call me Charles. Od’s fish! Fairy godmother, indeed! You’ve a sharp tongue on you, Captain Nichols. Come. Sit. We’ll share some wine. To your health, my dears, and a very happy marriage.”

“You’re not angry?” Hope asked.

Charles shrugged. “I’m not known for being jealous. While some dreamed of jewels, pensions, favors, you wanted to go fishing. You wanted a possessive, glowering husband. You wanted to be in love. Apparently, you wanted shrubbery, too. If he was man enough to fight for you, you’d have your knight in shining armor. If he wasn’t, then you’d be better off with me. I’ll admit I had hopes for the latter outcome, but I’m pleased to see you happy and I’ll not deny it out of spite.”

 

~

 

Not long after they left, a moody Charles Stuart tossed back a glass of wine. A gloating spiteful mistress, a weeping homesick wife, deserted by his pretty country miss—what did her towering husband call her? Ah, yes, elf. It suited her. He had promised to see her taken care of. She was a lady by title now, with a husband who loved her. It wasn’t the usual reward but she was an unusual woman.
I shall miss her. Who will I fish with? Who will I sail with? Who will come to the races and swig brandy and beer?

Other books

Scribblers by Stephen Kirk
The Fields of Death by Scarrow, Simon
The Faceless by Simon Bestwick
Savage Impulses by Danielle Dubois
Julius Caesar by Ernle Bradford
The Ghost's Child by Sonya Hartnett
Lo! by Charles Fort