Still, he was the one who gasped as her gaze flashed up. Their
gazes met as reflections in the window glass.
She said on a sigh, "You might have paid more than fourteen
drachma for me, you know."
"I was not a wealthy man," he answered, and thought better
of it instantly. Perhaps she wanted to hear that she was worth the
moon and the stars to him. He stepped back, but she turned to face
him before he could dramatically take her into his arms. He had
lost the edge with this woman, the advantage that should have
come with surprise and physical closeness. Now he would have to
use his wits, and hope that hers were as out of practice as his were.
He doubted that. No, he knew it, he'd heard her sharpening her
tongue on the fool English captain in the garden. And she had not
exactly been slow of tongue when they'd traded barbs over dinner.
James feared he was in for a long night. Penance, his father
would call it. Was any woman worth this?
She looked past his shoulder and the frown that was already
on her face deepened. "The bed curtains were closed. You were
hiding in the bed?" Her eyes widened and her gaze flew back to
his. "In my
bed
? How dare you? For how long?"
"I have been in your bed before."
"You have not," she corrected, her diction precise. "I've been
in yours."
That was his Honoria, accurate and specific. He grinned
confidently. "Frequently."
The dark anger that filled her eyes looked like it came
straight from her soul. He shrugged. "The bed was the only private
place in your room. It was logical."
"Your logic was ever sloppy."
"I had to improvise."
"Also not your forte."
James put a hand thoughtfully on his chin. "Now, why did I
come here? Certainly not to share a pleasant conversation with
you."
"I am not a pleasant person," she snapped back. She doubted
the Spaniard had sneaked into her room, her very bed, for the
purpose of seducing her. Or had he? Why? How long had he been
hiding behind the bed curtains? Long enough for his scent to
remain on the sheets? Her stomach tightened at the thought, even as
a tingling of excitement raced through her. "I shall have to have the
bed linen burned, I suppose."
He looked indignant. "Do you suspect I have lice?"
"I don't dare to suspect where you might have been, or what
filth you might have acquired along the way."
He gestured at his elegant clothing. "I have acquired the
polish of an English gentleman."
"Stole it, more like." She saw how he bridled at this implied
insult to his father. Good. That gave her a weapon to use against
him. Perhaps not a good one, but—she sighed. "Go away. We'll
fight another time, if you must have a fight. I'm tired now."
"You've had one confrontation too many today, Honoria."
His words broke gently into her thoughts. "You want me to go
away. You want me to never have been born," he added. "You
don't want to argue, though you think hurting me would be nice if
you could manage the energy."
She nodded slowly. "I would like those things, yes."
He took a step closer to her, catching her gaze with those
warm golden eyes of his. He had such expressive eyes. Clear,
perfect eyes. Everything about him was perfect. She couldn't help
but note how a swath of dark brown hair fell in a graceful arc
across his wide forehead, how his heavy brows arched emphatically
over those so-expressive eyes with their long, long lashes, how his
wide shoulders and muscular thighs were shown off by his well-
tailored evening clothes. She'd always known he was perfection to
gaze upon. What difference did it make? Derrick was a fine
physical specimen, as well, yet he was the lowest type of life form.
This man with the warm honey eyes was even lower in the great
chain of creation, as low as the serpent in the Garden. He was the
devil himself.
The difference, she knew as the air heated around her, was
that Derrick no longer tempted her. Perhaps he never had. Diego—
James, whoever he was and whatever he called himself—might be
the spawn of Satan, but that didn't stop her from wanting to—
Honoria reached out her hand toward his cheek, the
movement slow, unwilling, the ache to trace her fingers along the
strong line of his jaw and trace his sensual full lips perverse and
foolish. She was barely able to draw her hand back before it made
contact. She was left furious with herself, and with only a years' old
memory of the warm suppleness of his skin.
"You are evil incarnate!" she declared, thrusting her hands
behind her back and clasping them tightly together. "I shall scream
now," she added, standing stiffly erect before him. She refused to
look into his eyes anymore. "I will call for help."
"Why?" he asked, in his familiar, teasing way, head tilted
boyishly to one side.
"Because I need help." She shouldn't let herself be drawn into
conversing with the devil; she should be screaming.
"Perhaps it is something I can help you with." He took
another step toward her. She took a step back, and her shoulders
came up against the cool glass of the window. "Helping me is not a
concept you are familiar with."
"I helped you," he reminded her. "For a price."
"It was always commerce with you," she snarled.
"I know." He did not look in the least abashed or ashamed by
this admission. He glanced around the bedroom. "Are you going to
scream and compromise yourself when the household rushes to
your rescue?" he asked mildly. "Or may I continue with what I
have come here to do?"
She held a hand up between them. It was a very dramatic
gesture, just the sort of theatrical thing she loathed. She put her
hand down and faced him with proudly raised chin. "If you've
come here to ravish me—"
"When did I ever have to ravish you?" He sounded genuinely
affronted.
She had the strongest urge to stomp her foot. "Nobody
ever
wants to ravish me." The complaint came from the deepest part of
her, unbidden, and terrifying in the dark anger it stirred in her. Her
tone was sharp as glass shards when she snarled, "I know I'm an
overgrown ugly cow, but why not pretend just for once that what
you have on your mind is—" Honoria clamped her hands over her
mouth. What was she saying? She didn't
want
to be ravished—that
wasn't the bloody point!
He looked stunned. "Honoria—"
She rammed her hands against his chest and pushed him
backward. Tried to. He didn't budge. He put his hands up and
grasped her wrists. To keep her from pounding on him next, she
supposed. Trapped between the window and large man who held
her hostage, she demanded, "What is it you want with me?
What
?"
She had no idea where she was. A private house, that was
easy to surmise. In a small, plainly furnished room. Alone. She'd
been draped in veils and robes again and the slave dealers had
delivered her to the house of her new master, but no one had told
her who that master was. She'd been brought to this room by a pair
of elderly women, and a tray of food and a flask of water had been
provided. Earlier, a woman servant had helped her bathe, and
offered her fresh clothes afterward. At first Honoria had wanted to
refuse to wear the clothing given by a master to a slave, but she
was a practical person at her core. Her black mourning dress was
a filthy wreck. She could not stand the thought of donning it once
more, though it was the only reminder left to her of her life in
England, and of the mother she had lost. She was lost herself, dead
to the life she had known. She hated accepting this truth which new
clothing represented, but she was too pragmatic and unsentimental
not to exchange the rags. The Arabic clothing was exotic, but far
from immodest. The vivid colors of the many layers of robes in
green and rust and gold suited her coloring. She did her fresh-
washed hair in a simple long braid down her back and allowed the
woman servant to wind a light, nearly transparent veil around her
head and show her how to tuck an end of the draping across her
face. Honoria asked questions, but all she received in reply were
compliments on how well she spoke the language. Then they left
her alone again. She paced like a trapped animal for a while.
Eventually she ate her cold meal.
By the time she was done, the woman returned and told her,
"Our master will see you now." The servant gestured toward the
door. "Please come with me."
Honoria wanted to back up against a wall and fight to be
dragged from the room. She wanted to proclaim that she called no
man "Master" and obeyed no man on earth
—
other than the king,
her father, and her beloved betrothed. To state haughtily that she
was the heiress of a dukedom, who gave orders but rarely took
them. She also wanted to beg and scream and cry and crawl under
the bed in quaking terror
.
She did none of these things, made no foolish proclamations.
She could not call on anyone but God for help, which she did
silently. She went where the servant directed her, all too aware that
if she did not please her new "Master" that any fate he chose could
be dealt out to her. She feared that she might be tortured, but being
sold would be worse. Lady Alexandra Margaret Frances Honoria
Pyne was terrified down to her soul of facing the unspeakable
horror of standing on the auction block once more.
She was trembling as she was shown through another
doorway, now almost grateful to this stranger who had bought her.
The other woman withdrew, closing the door behind her, leaving
Honoria alone with their owner. She looked toward the man who
had taken her away from that horrible place, and very nearly
opened her mouth to say "Thank you."
The tall young man coming toward her was dressed in clean
white robes. His beard was trimmed, his dark hair combed back,
and there was a bright, cheerful smile on his handsome face.
She stopped dead in her tracks, and shouted angrily, "You!"
"Hello, Honoria," the Spaniard said affably, and held a
tattered piece of paper toward her. "I bought you so you could
translate this for me."
"What are you doing in England ?" she demanded. "Now what do
you want from me?"
The Honorable James Marbury stepped back again and
bowed to her with elegant polish that did nothing to allay her
suspicions. Then he dropped gracefully onto one knee. "Honoria
Pyne," he said, sounding sincere and not looking the least bit silly
gazing up from his humble position. "Do me the honor of
becoming my wife."
After she watched him in silence for quite a long time, James
shifted his weight onto his other knee. She stayed very still, barely
breathing, though she did blink a few times. It didn't help. He was
still there when she opened her eyes.
"Honoria?"
"Yes?"
James came slowly back to his feet. He moved closer.
Barefoot, wearing a nightgown and robe, with her beautiful copper
hair unbound, she did not look so different than she had in Algiers.
Her vulnerability was not so open, but he knew it was there.
He hoped it was. Or had she changed utterly, become as sharp and
flinty and dead to feelings as rumor claimed? If he took her in his
arms now, would it do any good?
A spark of anger lit deep within him, and a bitter voice told
him he was giving himself up to a life of sacrifice and penance if he
continued with this mad scheme. The voice urged him to walk
away, to run from his past rather than embrace a woman who did
not want him. Pride kept him where he was, and another type of
anger. Was he to leave her to Derrick Russell? If it was to be a
contest between them, this time he would win.
Besides, he still wanted her.
"Do you have needs?" he asked. "Do you feel desire? You