Authors: Phoebe Conn,Copyright Paperback Collection (Library of Congress) DLC
As they neared the edge of the woods, Belle fully expected Falcon to shoot Lieutenant Beck. She certainly did not like the officer, but the prospect of his losing his life at any moment was a terrible strain. She prayed Falcon would wait for another target, but it was difficult to seek medicinal herbs while anticipating the bloodshed he could so easily cause. She and Dominique dismounted to pick some sprigs of peppermint, but the lieutenant was never more than a few steps away, preventing them from modifying their escape plan.
Horribly distracted by his presence, they returned to Camden with only a few of the herbs they had hoped to find, but it was enough to justify the trip in Dr. Perry's eyes, even if they had failed miserably in their own. Dominique gave Sean a second cup of white willow bark tea, but he sipped it slowly, and she was sincerely worried
that he might still be too weak to survive his wound. His safety was also a continuing concern, but she had yet to invent a plausible excuse for him to have a guard An armed soldier would only endanger Falcon's life should he come for Sean, and that possibility tormented her, too.
Once they had returned to their tent, Belle released her frustrations in a strangled hiss. "You can't keep sitting up all night with Sean and working most of the day," she complained, "or you'll exhaust yourself and end up on a cot with the wounded."
Dominique had barely touched her dinner, but she was too tired to have much appetite. She knew Belle was right, but could see no alternative. "My health can't be a priority," she replied. "I really believed we could just ride out of here, but with Lieutenant Beck tagging along after us everywhere we go, that's not going to be possible. We could just sneak away on foot in the dead of night, but I'd hate to abandon Baby Dee and Ladybug."
"We may have to," Belle countered. "No, wait," she begged. "What if we were to set all the horses loose?"
"After we'd saddled our own?"
"Yes," Belle enthused. "That would surely create enough confusion to allow us to get away. Let's do it tonight."
Dominique grabbed for that hope, and then just as quickly discarded it. She wanted to leave as badly as Belle, but not yet. "I'm worried about Sean. He was feverish this afternoon."
Belle made an effort to hold her temper, but was only partially successful. "He's a British officer, Dominique. We can't trust him to do anything other than betray us."
Dominique rose from her cot and placed her hands in the small of her back as she stretched lazily. "He could have done that yesterday, but didn't."
"Perhaps he's toying with us the way a cat delights in tormenting a mouse, He'll bat us around with his paws until
he grows bored, and then we'll be swallowed without so much as a burp."
Despite Belle's vivid metaphor, Dominique did not want to believe that Sean could be so cruel. "It's also possible he still has feelings for me."
"Do you want him to?" Belle chided. "Do you want him to beg you to stay with him? Why do you think he told Lieutenant Beck to keep an eye on us? Was that the action of a loving, trusting man?"
"He has no reason to trust us, Belle, but he's been badly hurt and may not be thinking all that clearly." Dominique waited a moment and then added, "Like Falcon, I'm sure he's shocked and surprised, and doesn't know quite what to make of us being here."
Belle had thought of little else all day. "That's why we need to move on now," she stressed, "before either of them turns vicious."
Dominique understood that her sister was still recoiling from her latest bitter encounter with Falcon, but she trusted her cousin not to turn on them. Sean, however, posed another problem entirely. "I'm going to check on Sean, but I won't wait up with him all night. Now that I've had time to consider the matter fully, I know Falcon wouldn't harm him while he's as weak as a babe."
Sick of arguing about Sean, when Dominique returned to the farmhouse, Belle fetched a bucket of warm water to wash, then sat on her cot in her chemise. She did not know which was worse, the prospect of Falcon bursting into their tent a second time, or that he might have already ridden as far as he could go in the opposite direction. Worn out by worry, she lay down and closed her eyes, but Falcon soon interrupted her dreams.
Falcon knelt beside the cot and ran his hand down Belle's back, then leaned close to kiss her cheek. "Belle," he coaxed, "wake up. We need to talk."
Belle had left the lantern burning for Dominique and she
could make out Falcon's expression clearly. The fierce strain anger had lent his features was gone, and a slow smile curled across his lips. This was the man she loved, but still wary, she sat up slowly.
"You ought not to be here," she scolded.
"Neither should you," Falcon replied. "Where's Dominique?"
"Where she always is: tending Sean."
Falcon heard the note of jealousy in her complaint and wondered if she missed her sister's company or envied her devotion. "Do you want him for yourself?" he asked.
Sickened by his question, Belle glanced away. She had never wanted any man but Falcon, but could not forget how eager he had been to escape her on his last visit home. And she had pursued him! she agonized. "I hope Sean dies an agonizing death," she finally replied, "and soon."
He knew without having to ask that she would have told Dominique that he had shot Sean, but he did not regard it as a breach of trust. He would have bragged about it to Dominique himself had he had the chance. "Come with me," he urged, but Belle shrank back slightly and that hurt him badly. "Are you afraid of me now? Have I ruined everything between us?"
The pain of that possibility filled his expression with such utter desperation that Belle reached out to caress his cheek. She loved him so dearly, but he had given her an awful fright. "I didn't think you wanted anything between us."
Falcon knew he had given her good 'cause for that sorry opinion, but hoped to change it. "You have always been a challenge, Belle." He slid his hand around her neck to draw her close for a kiss he made very light and endearing until he was confident she wanted more as badly as he.
"Come with me," he repeated in a softer tone. "It's too dangerous for us here." He rose and offered his hand to help Belle to her feet.
She reached for her shawl and stepped into her shoes. "I'll just wear my chemise. If anyone stops us I'll say I was going to the river to bathe."
"And what excuse should I give?"
"You're so clever, they wouldn't even see you."
"The soldiers are too lazy to watch the river. We'll be as safe there as we were at home on the banks of the James." He raised the tent flap and peered out. He heard crickets aplenty, but no male voices carried on the warm night air. He reached back for Belle's hand, then left camp by a different route than he had used the previous night. Once they reached the river, he followed the narrow trail skirting the shore a long way upstream, then angled into the woods. Too hungry for Belle to take her all the way to his camp, he turned and drew her into his arms.
Belle's first thought was that Falcon could not make up his mind about her from one day to the next while her love for him never wavered. Her second thought was that his kiss was so delicious she did not care how fickle he might be. She leaned into his embrace, slid her hands under his shirt, and hugged him tight. He was lean and tough, and she took comfort in his strength rather than demand the touching promises she had once craved.
Falcon released Belle just long enough to rip off his shirt, then threw it down to provide her with a soft bed. He tossed away her shawl, and then drew her back into his arms. "You are already mine," he breathed against her lips. It was an arrogant vow, but the only one he would give. He wound his fingers in her hair. Touched by the moonlight, the curls shone like spun gold.
He kissed her hard, and then deeply. He traced the delicate bow of her lips with the tip of his tongue, teasing her until she thrust her tongue into his mouth in a passionate plea for more. He sucked her tongue, and lifted her off her feet. Her shoes fell to the leaves, and when he set her down, he untied the bow at the neckline of her chemise. He
stepped back, and needing no encouragement, she shrugged it off. The linen garment pooled at her feet, but she quickly stepped out of it and back into his arms.
Falcon uttered a low, satisfied groan as the lush fullness of Belle's breasts melted into the hard planes of his chest. He ran his hands down her back, then cupped her buttocks to enjoy the silken smoothness of their gentle swell. He ground his hips against hers, forcefully proving how badly he wanted her, then captured her mouth for another kiss that blurred into another, and another.
Belle's whole body ached with wanting him, the tips of her breasts were exquisitely sensitive, and she felt herself growing wet with desire. When Falcon leaned down to suckle, she slid her hands through his hair, and with a graceful dip encouraged him to drop down with her and stretch out on his shirt. She could hold him so much more easily now that she did not have to fight to remain on her feet.
Falcon's mouth was still at her breast, but he ran his hand up her thigh, parting her legs and separating her tender folds with a gentle sweetness that made her cry out for more. His fingertips dipped, circled, and teased, creating the most delicious sensation she had ever known. The glorious feeling grew, spreading like the petals of an opening rose, and she bent her knee, encouraging him to give still more.
Belle's own scent was more seductive than the finest French perfume, and Falcon burned with the need to sample her taste. He trailed kisses over the smooth flatness of her stomach, then parted the triangle of curls and sent the tip of his tongue across the bud nestled at the top of her cleft. He felt her shivering response, but knew it could not possibly be revulsion and took far more, lapping up her essence until her soft, mewing cries became breathless gasps.
He unfastened his belt with one hand, shoved his buckskins aside, and moved up over her. Propping himself on his elbows, he slid the tip of his manhood through her crease, retracing the path he had just blazed with his lips.
He coaxed lightly, probed gently, and then with a savage lunge, thrust deep into her heated core, and lay still. He felt her pain as surely as he had her pleasure, but waited now for it to wane.
He kissed her eyelids, her earlobes, and then her trembling lips. "I am sorry to be the one to hurt you," he murmured in a husky whisper, "but I could not have stood it had it been another man."
Belle could not even imagine such a possibility. She grabbed a handful of his hair to pull his mouth to hers and kissed him with an enthusiasm that erased whatever fears he may have had as to her reaction. He began to move with an easy motion that created soft flutterings deep within her. She relaxed in his arms, needing all he could give, and floated into it on passion's wings.
The pain soon blurred into a numbing warmth, which gradually swelled to the pleasure he had taught her to expect. She clung to him, mirroring his thrusts to pull him down even deeper, until lost in him, she was filled with a sparkling burst of joy that enveloped him in the same glorious splendor. She had followed him for love, but knew this night would leave them forever changed.
She whispered in his ear, "I swear I love you more than life, Falcon."
The brave rose up slightly. "No. Never more than life, for I could not bear to lose you." He smothered her pretty promises with lavish kisses and made love to her again. Then, when the sky began to lighten, he took her down to the river to wash away all evidence of their passion. He felt her watching him as he bathed, too, but shook his head.
"I can't keep you with me a minute longer. Tell Dominique you are leaving tonight. I'll come for the both of you. Be ready."
Belle shook the leaves off her chemise and pulled it on over her head. "We'll need horses. Is there a way to take Ladybug and Baby Dee?"
Falcon responded with a derisive snort. "I could steal horses from a British camp at noon. Don't worry. I'll have your pets." He walked part of the way with her, then, after a last lingering kiss, disappeared into the woods and left her to find her way back to her tent alone.
A thin layer of fog brushed the ground, making it difficult for Belle to follow the main path from the river, but she stayed close enough to prevent anyone from tracing the route of her late-night excursion. She held her breath, half expecting to find Lieutenant Beck waiting for her, but there was no one standing guard by their tent. Dominique had sworn she would not sit up with Sean again, but her cot was empty.
Not really caring what her sister did after having spent such a reckless and wonderful night with Falcon, Belle lay down to catch what sleep she could before morning. She stretched and with a mischievous smile, wondered what it would be like to make love with Falcon in a feather bed.
Dominique's night had been anything but blissful. Sean was in agony, and while she had every confidence her chamomile poultices were healing his wound, he had no such belief. Dr. Perry had prescribed increased doses of laudanum, but Sean had refused them.
"I can't even move my arm," Sean complained.
"It's only been a few days since you were shot," Dominique reminded him. "You were lucky not to have bled to death before you got here. You need to rest. Why won't you take the laudanum?"
Sean's eyes were clouded with pain, but his words were clear. "Perry wants me unconscious so he can cut off my arm."
Dominique sat back slightly. "Is that what has you so upset? Are you afraid you're in danger of losing your arm?"
She was holding another cup of willow bark tea, and
when Sean reached for her hand it spilled all over her apron. "Don't laugh at me," he cried. "I'd rather be dead than lose my arm. I'll give you everything I own, but you've got to promise me you'll not let him do it."
Ignoring her wet apron, Dominique grasped Sean's right hand in both of hers and leaned close. If the inflammation in his shoulder spread, amputating his arm would never save him. He was too weak to survive the procedure even if it would and she knew Dr. Perry would never put him through such an agonizing ordeal when it would surely kill him.