her head and laughed at the stars exploding above. This was
heaven, the paradise garden of the Persian and Moorish poets. Her
laughter was full of joy, and of amusement at the innocent girl who
had sat in a chilly English library reading those poems with
wonder, but with no understanding of what the words tried to
convey.
How could she have known? How?
That girl was gone, and the woman in the garden was blind
with desire and delight. Her laughter turned into a long gasp of
pleasure as another climax took her. Her back arched and Diego
grasped her hips, thrusting up as he pulled her down hard on his
erection, his climax fallowing hers by only a moment.
They ended up stretched out side by side on the tiles by the
fountain. There was a small crack in the fountain basin, so the
ground beneath her was slightly damp from the constant small
drip. Honoria didn't mind. She was in Diego's arms and she didn't
mind anything while she was there. Her world had spiraled tightly
into the circle of Diego's arms. Day into night and into day again.
"You are," he said, brushing a hand through her tangled
damp hair, "fantastic."
His face was close enough to hers that she saw him clearly,
though his handsome features were shadowed and shaded by the
darkness, and silvered by moonlight. She did not mistake the
intensity in the depths of his honey gold eyes. She did not expect
him to speak words of love, but she basked in the warmth of his
gaze, and drank in whatever words of praise or affection he had to
offer.
She did not dare to offer him words in reply. She could not
bear to speak tonight. She feared the truth about how he made her
feel would spill out if even one word were to escape
—
how she'd
come to feel about him. He looked as if he wanted her to speak. As
though
he
waited
for
something
—
praise,
reassurance,
commitment? She had given him everything, but she could not give
him words. Words were too important to her; words made things
real. If she spoke what was in her heart, she was certain her heart
would be broken when this time out of time came to an end
.
Because it would come to an end
—
she was not so besotted
not to realize that forever wasn't possible between her and her
corsair. But not yet, she prayed. Please, not yet
.
She traced a finger slowly around his full lips, then drew his
mouth to hers for a long, slow kiss. As their tongues speared and
circled, the heat began to build inside her again. Deep in her belly
the sweet liquid ache centered, then spread. Her thighs opened like
a blossom at the merest touch of his hand. The bud within the
intimate folds of flesh was already swollen and throbbing. It took
but the slightest pressure from the pad of his thumb against it to
send an orgasm jolting through her. Her muscles stiffened and she
clung to him as he coaxed a second flash of intense pleasure from
her, and another. She was weeping when he entered her again,
awash in a world of passion, where there were no words and none
were needed.
After that they slept for a while under the stars, exhausted,
limbs entangled, with her long hair covering them like a blanket.
When she awoke the moon was still high, and she remembered that
there were words that she
could
give him
.
It took some effort to get him to wake. She thought he looked
like a ravished angel when he finally opened his eyes and sat up
with a yawn. That she was responsible for his dissolute condition
pleased her no end. She put out a hand and he helped her to her
feet. She giggled when she realized that she could barely stand. She
was weak, and not a little sore, from all that lovemaking, but she
didn't mind a bit. She was still laughing as she snatched up a white
silk caftan. First she put on the spectacles she'd dropped on the pile
of cloth, then pulled the caftan on over her head. The nearly sheer
silk was an erotic caress against her skin. As her head emerged
from the neck of the caftan, she saw that Diego had pulled on his
robe. The way he belted it on left most of his chest bare. She
marveled at how exciting she found the glimpse of skin framed in
the long vee formed by the edges of the robe. She could not get
enough of the man.
"Come," she said, reaching a hand out to him. "There's
something you wanted me to do, remember?" He looked confused
as she led him toward the house. "A letter to be read," she
reminded him.
A light smiled out from the high lattice window of his work
room, catching them in a square of illumination. She could just
make out her lover's features by squinting hard. Diego looked as
though he didn't understand her for a moment, then he nodded. It
pained her that he looked as if he was waking from a dream. She
sighed, but was comforted by his arm coming around her
shoulders.
They were still arm in arm when they walked into the work
room. She froze in the doorway when she saw the people waiting
within. Diego's arm tightened around her.
He breathed a curse that was also a name. "Ibrahim Rais."
A white figure rose up from the chair behind the table. "My
son," a deep voice intoned sadly. "I fear that you have been trying
to escape me."
There really was no escape, Honoria knew. Oh, she could have
jumped out a window and run off somewhere, but in the end she
would have had to explain why to her father. She was as trapped
now by her father's expectations as she had always been. Trapped
by circumstances, history, duty, and habit, too, she supposed.
Honoria always did what was proper. She was used to attending
and participating in ceremonies of one form or another. Whether it
be lending her countenance to the christening of village children on
the family estate, or wearing a coronet at the Queen's coronation—
or marching down the aisle at her own wedding, she always did
what was expected and correct. What else could she, the heir of the
Pyneham line, do but put on the shimmering silver-gray gown
Maggie chose for her, let the family diamonds be clasped at her
throat, and walk with proud dignity into the music room?
She brought Huseby with her. If she must face this ordeal,
she was determined to do one unaccustomed thing—though it had
taken a short, sharp argument to get her maid to agree to stand with
her as maid of honor.
"You're my best friend," she had finally argued. "After all
we've been through together, you can do this as well. Please."
Huseby didn't agree until the butler knocked firmly on the
door and said His Grace demanded Honoria's presence right now.
"I suppose I can't let you face the Spaniard alone," she said.
Her father was waiting by the music room door when the
butler opened it and bowed them inside. He handed her the bouquet
of white and yellow roses she'd dropped in the library. Habit kept
Honoria's spine straight, her head high, and her steps stately and
dignified as she advanced on her father's arm between a row of
chairs, with Huseby walking slowly ahead of them. She was aware
of a great many more flowers in baskets and vases, resting on every
surface in the room. The room was full of people, but she saw none
of them even though she was defiantly wearing her spectacles. She
had no idea where they'd come from, and didn't care. The only
person she was aware of was the large man who stood next to the
black-clad vicar in a spot precisely between the two tall French
windows. The windows were not of stained glass, yet Honoria felt
the chapel-like atmosphere of the place, and for the first time her
knees began to wobble with nerves. Her stomach clenched and her
breathing grew shallow.
This was really going to happen.
This was really going to happen!
Dear God, this was really going to—
To the devil with duty and habit! she thought wildly, and
would have hiked up her skirts and run like the wind, if James
Marbury had not appeared suddenly before her. He was taking her
from her father and gazing steadily into her eyes. She wasn't sure if
he gave her strength or turned her into a complete coward, but she
did go with him to stand before Reverend Menzies. James's hand
over hers was large, strong and warm. Huseby took the roses from
her.
Honoria almost laughed when she saw the sour look on the
minister's face. James noticed the minister's annoyed look as well,
and he and Honoria shared an amused glance. "And I thought you
would be the one in a tearing fury," James whispered to her in
Arabic.
Reverend Menzies turned a sharp glower on James, and
looked as if he was about to retort. Then he cleared his throat,
waved them to stand directly in front of him, and intoned, "Dearly
beloved…"
Honoria looked at James, ignoring the ceremony meant to
join them together as man and wife. The concept was patently
ridiculous, despite being legally and religiously binding. All she
wanted to do was get him alone and wring his true purpose for this
farce out of him. But all she could do with her father watching was
meekly reply, "I will" to the vows to love, honor and obey. She was
forsworn even as she spoke, but this was not the time or place to
point out her insincerity. Besides, she kept slipping into the fantasy,
the falsehood, the foolishness of looking into honey gold eyes and
believing she was a beloved and cherished young bride.
That helped get her through the ceremony, until the moment
came when Reverend Menzies said, "You may now kiss the bride."
James had sworn to himself not to do anything to frighten or
upset Honoria, but when it came to kissing her, he couldn't stop the
instinct to take her in his arms and cover her mouth hungrily with
his. Whether her lips opened beneath his with surprise or desire
held no importance to him. Her hands moved to his shoulders. For
a moment she tried to fend him off, then her fingers clutched his
coat, dug into his shoulders, and pulled him to her. The heat of
contact flashed through him, the softness of her lips enticed and
invited. The satin of her dress was smooth beneath his hand as he
caressed the long length of her back, feeling her arch against his
palm. She was a creature of fire clothed in silver, like a
marvelously wrapped present waiting to be opened. She was his
and his alone. He had only to strip away the trappings and—
"Ahem."
He was vaguely aware of restless murmuring behind them,
then far more aware of the sudden withdrawal of the woman in his
arms. She had heard and reacted to those faceless others, when
James wanted her attention to be completely centered on himself!
Her standing in society was more important to her than he could
ever be.
"Excuse me, but I said you should kiss the bride, not ravish
her." The sanctimonious minister's voice was stern, but so soft that
only James and Honoria could hear him.
Honoria dropped her hands from James's shoulders as though
she'd been burned. Her head came up proudly.
James had no choice but to let her go, and take a step back.
He was afraid she would start fighting him if he did not. He felt
like such a fool, all of a sudden. His physical attraction to Honoria
was a very real thing, but his reasons for marrying her made no
sense to him anymore.
She didn't need him.
James forced his fears out of his mind. He wasn't sure if he
was more angry at her rejection, the minister's words, or all the