Read The black swan Online

Authors: Day Taylor

The black swan (56 page)

BOOK: The black swan
7.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Presently she felt her jacket being unbuttoned, and obeying his murmured commands, she began to undress him. His coat fell to the floor, covering hers. His fingers were at the green silk tie around her neck. It floated away in the gloom. Then her shirt slipped from her shoulders. She stood quivering, resisting the impulse to hide her bared breasts from this large man to whom she thought to give herself. "Take off my shirt," he whispered. With shaking fingers she obeyed. The curling black hair that matted his chest sprang into view. He took her hand in his, placing it against his breast as he touched hers. His fingers burned against her flesh, sending an unbearable thrill through her.

"Touch me as I touch you. Let me feel you caress me, Dulcie." Hesitantly at first, her hands moved over the heavy muscles that mounded smoothly across his chest, feeling their taut contours with growing excitement.

His arms were around her, bending her backward in the crook of his arm so that his mouth moved down, down to kiss each breast longingly, lovingly. Her long riding skirt fell around her ankles.

Her voice shook as she said, "I ... I came to you in the night, Adam."

"What?" He was barely listening.

"Friday night, very late. I . . . was awake. I stood . . . unclothed. I wanted—I wanted to come to you."

A bitter vision of himself sprang into Adam's mind.

"I . . . stood outside your window. Oh, Adam, why didn't you know? I wanted to go on, but I was so afraid."

He kissed her and held her tenderly. "Are you afraid now, Dulcie?"

"A little, but I need you. Adam, hold me."

"Dulcie." He drew her hand down to his throbbing penis. His tongue went into her mouth, moving back and forth, probing, tantalizing. She responded, trembling, eager, caressing him through his trousers.

He jerked the tape that held up her pantalettes. Dulcie gasped, her breath searing her lungs. She stood naked. The lightning played on her breasts, the gentle swell of her hipbones, on the dark triangle below her belly.

He ran trembling fingers over her breasts, holding them almost reverently, bending to kiss each taut upturned nipple. The scent of her perfume, sweet as flowers, cool with her innocence yet spiced and warmed by her rapid heartbeats, mingled with that aphrodisiac other fragrance, the strong, sharp scent of her readiness for him.

His head grew light. His blood raced.

His hands moved down flat against her belly, his thumbs caressing her thighs where they parted.

Dulcie looked into his darkened eyes, her own half-closed, her nostrils flaring with passion. It was this she wanted, the touch of her lover's hands upon her secret flesh, the union of his body with hers, holding him within her as she had held no man.

His hands moved on her gently, making them both shudder.

He placed her fingers on the top button of his trousers. His lips were on hers, his tongue sliding against hers, as she fumbled shakily with the tight fastening.

Adam moaned softly as he murmured her name. She

jumped away from him, drawing in her breath in a screaming gasp. Rain and the wind whirled through the small room as the door let go of its hinges and crashed to the floor behind Adam. Then her heart exploded in her breast, leaving her without the means to breathe.

Wolf.

The torrential rain poured down on the overseer, funnel-ing off his sodden hat down his neck, streaming down his filthy shirt and trousers. He smiled hungrily at Dulcie, a grimace of broken, tobacco-stained teeth, his face flushed with lust. With one hand he held his erect penis, moving the hand away from himself and back with rapid purpose. Then his body curved forward, his face growing red and tight, his body twitching in pleasured spasms.

Adam instinctively moved toward Wolf. "Oh, God! You stinkin' bastard!"

Dulcie's breath came in sobs. He took her in his arms, pressing her face against his chest, shielding her from Wolf's obscenity.

It was over in seconds. "I been a-watchin* y'all," Wolf grinned.

Adam, unable to move without exposing Dulcie, was white with impotent rage. His voice shook. "Get out of here!"

"Naow don't y'all worry none. I wouldn't tell Mr. Moran." Wolf grinned again. "But I am't a-gonna fergit what-all I seen, neither."

"You son of a bitch. I'm going to kill you." Adam's voice was deep and grating.

"Cap'n," said Wolf in the burlesque of respect he loved to show his betters, "you ain't a-gonna kill me. Dulcie's treated me like shit ever since she was a snot-nosed brat. Naow things is changed, ain't they. I seen her fer what she is. I ain't a-gonna fergit that. No sirree!"

Adam's hands tightened painfully. He pressed against the back of Dulcie's head as though he would drive her inside the protective shell of his own body.

Wolf moved out of sight. Quickly Adam picked up his frock coat. He wrapped it around her. She turned her face from him, shamed and horrified. She stood paralyzed with humiliation, clutching his coat against her.

They heard the sharp crack of a whip and Wolfs shouted "Giddap!" As the horses whinnied, Adam sprang

through the door. Strawberry and the blue roan cantered riderless into the pines.

Wolf was mounting his own horse. Adam, running, was almost on him when, laughing. Wolf whipped his horse. The animal leaped forward, taking him out of Adam's reach. He reined in and turned around. "Cap'n, y'all ain't a-gonna do nuthin'." He disappeared into the storm.

The rain pelted down coldly on Adam. His breathing hurt his chest. In frustrated fury he returned to the cabin. Dulcie cowered in the darkest corner. She looked up in fear as he stood in the doorway, water running from his body to make darker pools on the dirt floor.

Adam shuddered. "Oh, God, Dulcie." He wanted to erase the terrible moments by his presence, to hold her against him to stop her shaking and make her feel loved and safe once more.

She cringed at his touch. Her voice was high. "D-don*t touch me!"

He put out his hands to her. She pressed herself against the filthy damp wall. He touched her hair, his face sad and tender. "Don't do this, Dulcie, don't."

"Don't look at me!" she shrieked, her eyes wide, filled with shame.

He laid her clothes in a pile near her. "Get dressed, Dulcie," he said gently and reached for his coat.

She grasped at it, clawing at the material as she held it tightly against her. "No! Go away. Let me be!"

"Don't be ashamed, Dulcie. You . . . you could never be anything but beautiful to me. I'm sorry it happened."

A strangled sound tore from her throat. Once more he tried to touch her, and she shrank from him. "I won't look at you, darling."

"Don't call me darling! Don't call me anythin'! Don*t speak to me—ever!"

"I was just going to hold the coat for you, like a screen."

With a quick bend of her knees she grabbed for her pantalettes. "Turn around!" She struggled one-handed to put the pantalettes on, still holding his coat against her, not trusting him to keep his back turned. He heard the rustling of cloth as his coat fell to the floor, her hysterical commands. "Stay as you are! Don't look!'*

"Dulcie, please—listen to me."

She swept past him, running for the door. He grabbed her arm, spinning her around so that she stood pinned

against him. "What do you think you're doing? You can't go out there alone."

She struggled, then gave up, staring past him, her mouth set, her eyes fixed on nothing.

He released her, gently caressing her arms. "I'm sorry, Dulcie. Things seem to turn out wrong for us."

"So you said." Her voice was toneless.

"It would have been an act of joy, not a thing to remember in shame—"

"Oh?" Her eyes flickered over his bare chest, then rose to his mouth and to his eyes. Her gaze was filled with bitter self-pity. "Shall I undress for you again?"

Blood swept his face like a dark flame.

Tears formed in her golden eyes, but she held herself straighter and disciplined her trembling mouth. "Adam, if you had said once, just one time, that you loved me, even if it was a Ke . . . But you didn't say it, did you?"

Adam hesitated too long, her hypocrisy choking him.

Her tears spilled over. "You needn't bother, Captain Tremain," she said woodenly. "Your opportunity has passed. I no longer wish to hear—anything."

"And you won't, Miss Moran."

She turned away from him, her back stiff. But she waited until he was dressed, and they walked together out of the cabin into the heavy rain.

As they neared the edge of the woods in sight of the plantation buildings, Adam said, "I'm going to carry you."

"You are not!"

He scooped her up, holding her so tightly she could not kick him, "Put your arm around my neck. Your horse fell. You hurt your back."

"I'm not goin' to lie."

"You are, and I am. And if you must stay in bed for a day or two to preserve your reputation, consider it worthwhile."

It was a long distance across the fields to the house, and all the way Dulcie was forced to listen to the regular beating of Adam's heart

Patricia, standing anxiously at the window, saw them coming. She flew to the back door. "Dulcie, honey, what's happened to you, baby?"

"I'm all right. Mama," Didcie said hastily. "Strawberry caught her foot and threw me. And when Adam picked

me up, a terrible crack of thunder made the horses bolt He's had to carry me the whole way home. I've strained my back, I think."

With Patricia and Claudine hovering anxiously, Adam laid Dulcie very gently on her bed and departed immediately, closing the door.

"Is the pain very bad, honey?" asked Patricia as Claudine began stripping off her sodden garments.

Now Dulcie let the scalding tears flow. "Oh, Mama, it hurts. It hurts!"

The flurry of activity and attention ended. Patricia went downstairs. Dulcie lay in bed, a book open by her, but she was looking out the window at the rain.

"Miss Dulcie, you dint hut yo' back. Somethin' else hap-pen.

Dulcie looked at Claudine without answering. She began to read. Soon Patricia would gently lecture her about the inadvisability of being alone with a gentleman. Dulcie would say that it was happenstance, how lucky he had come along then, and explain that Adam had been very kind.

"You ain't cryin* 'cause o' yo' back."

"I'm not cryin' at all!"

"No'm, but the tears leakin' anyway. Did you an' Mastah Adam fin'lly have each other?"

Dulcie's look was at first shocked, then defiant, then the bitter despair overlaid her features. "Oh, Claudine, he could never love me now!"

She knew that nothing she would say could astound Claudine. In words poured out against the pillow while Claudine rubbed her back soothingly, she relived the moments of being lovingly held and—almost—taken. The revulsion of seeing Wolf, the glimpse of his hand before Adam had shielded her. Now, the awful, abysmal sense of dishonor, degradation, of utter loss.

"Miss Dulcie, you got to put a good face on it. Iffen you does any mo' cryin', yo' mama gwine know somethin' ain't what you says."

"Claudine, I'm ruined anyway, I might as well—"

"De only way you ruin' is in yo' own min'. An' dat's de worst way. But you ain't gwine do it wiff him, not any mo.

"What would be the difference? If my mind is soiled,

then my body might as well enjoy it. That's all that's left to me now."

"No, ma'am!" Claudine said emphatically. "You tries it now, you jes* gettin' even wiff yo'seff, an' it won't be no fun no way! You is gwine stay in baid 'til Mastah Adam leave. Dey ain't gwine be no slippin' out an' makin' ev'thin' wussf

"Since when are you my mammy?"

"Jes' hesh yo' mouf. We gwine git you thoo dis 'thout a scratch."

The house stayed quiet, too quiet, until dinnertime. Even the youngest cousins tiptoed in deference to Dulcie's injury. After dinner Jeannie, Jenny, Gay, and Millie came hesitand}^ to her door. Soon they were twittering like gaily dressed birds. At dark Claudine left, making Gay promise that she would sleep overnight in the trundle bed by Dulcie. "Ah got a lots o' warshin' to do," she explained. "Might take me a long time."

So Dulcie was imprisoned, though with her favorite cousin.

Adam endured the evening with forced smiles, pretended hilarity, and good nature as the men played poker. After a run of poor luck he put down his cards and concealed a yawn. Without hurry, he excused himself.

As he lit the lamp in his room, a movement caught his eye. "Claudine! Is Dulcie—?"

"She fine, Mastah Adam. Ah come to tell you dat," she said with a strange calm.

He looked at her thoughtfully.

Claudine moved deeper into the room, nearer to him. "You a fine gent'man." Her eyes admired him, too linger-ingly.

"Did Mr. Moran send you here?" he asked harshly.

"Nossuh!" she said indignantly. "Mastah Jem doan do dat wiff his niggers. We's too val'able. Ain't nobody send me.

Adam crossed his arms in wary silence.

"Ah come to you 'cause you needin' a woman bad.**

"Well, that's nothing to do with you." He indicated the door.

"Ah knows how to pleasure a man right smart. Ah'd in-joy pleasurin' you." Her smile was gentle and dreamy.

His voice was hard as steel. "When I'm a man's guest,

I don't use his servants for my private gratification. Get the hell out of my room!" He held the door open, then closed it firmly after her.

He changed into dark gray trousers and sweater. Every muscle tense, he sat on the balcony, listening for the noises of the poker party to cease. His eyes, accustomed to night watching, saw the lights go out in the quarters and an occasional subtle change in the dark as someone moved across it.

He waited another hour, then swung over the balcony railing, and made his way down the ornamental iron pillar. His clothing blended in with the murky darkness. He ran through the yard, keeping to the trees, stealthily slippmg past the slave quarters.

Wolfs cabin stood out from the others. It was larger, and a lamp lit its windows. He kicked the door open. The overseer lay with a slatternly looking Negress, wearing only his filthy union suit, a pointed lump in its front.

BOOK: The black swan
7.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Wrong Number by Rachelle Christensen
Satin & Saddles by Cheyenne McCray
The Secret Prophecy by Herbie Brennan
Zera and the Green Man by Sandra Knauf
Warwick the Kingmaker by Michael Hicks
MC: LaPonte by L. Ann Marie