Barbara Pierce (29 page)

Read Barbara Pierce Online

Authors: Sinful Between the Sheets

Fitting his lips over hers, he showed her without words the depths of his affection for her. Slowly, thoroughly, he tasted her until he filled her with thoughts and senses.

Kilby ended the kiss by turning away. Slightly breathless, she laid her head down on his shoulder. The man knew how to kiss a woman senseless. She smiled against his throat as his arousal swelled and bumped against her hip.

“Christ, you would think the beast would have had its fill,” he lamented, shaking his head, chagrined at his unruly body.

She collapsed into giggles. The man was a satyr, and he reveled in his wicked devilment. “You could not possibly want—”

He brushed a kiss on her open mouth. “Yes. I do.” Fayne pushed her onto her feet. “Always and often. Unfortunately, we have a schedule to keep. We need to get you dressed, a proper breakfast, and then we are off.” He swatted her backside to get her moving.

“What schedule?” she asked, working the hairbrush through her snarled hair. “Our trip was unplanned.”

Fayne said nothing.

She sighed. What had she been thinking? The man was always making plans. The problem was he kept her in the dark until she was soundly caught up in his schemes. Kilby
paused her brushing as another thought occurred to her. “Are you worried that Archer might discover Gypsy’s whereabouts? Is that why we are leaving so early?”

Fayne took the hairbrush out of her hand before she hurt herself. He resumed the task of smoothing out her hair. “Stop fretting about your brother. Nipping has no say regarding either you or Gypsy.”

Fayne gave her a quick hug and handed the hairbrush back to her, and then headed for the door. “What is keeping the servant? I’ve ordered some hot water so you can wash. Someone should have delivered it by now.”

“Wait! You never told me,” she called after him before he disappeared behind the door. “If you are not worried about Archer or Gypsy, why are we leaving the inn within the hour? Is there something you are not telling me?”

He glanced pointedly at his crotch. If anyone looked at him too closely they would see a hint of his waning arousal. “With you in my arms, I could have stayed here for a month. As for where we are traveling to, you will just have to wait and see, my curious little wolf.”

 

It appeared Kilby’s curiosity was no match for the rhythmic rumbling and creaking of the coach as it traveled down the dirt road. Not even fifteen minutes had elapsed before her lashes fluttered closed and her relaxed figure slumped against him. Unable to resist, Fayne cuddled his sleeping wife in his arms. He had worn his duchess out, he thought with bone-deep contentment. Yesterday he had bound Kilby to him legally. Those ties satisfied the church and the law. Fayne, nevertheless, desired more.

There were other alluring ways a man could bind a lady to him. From their first kiss, the initial indiscernible threads had been cast around Kilby without her knowledge. Their lovemaking had strengthened those subtle bindings, tempting the lady into risking her heart and very soul.

His seductive games with Kilby had begun in lighthearted amusement. Her beauty had captivated him and the lady herself had exasperated him. Fayne had desired other women. A few had fallen in love with him. Nonetheless, when the passion had burned itself out and the moment came for them to part, Fayne had sauntered away with no regrets and his heart intact.

Kilby was different.

All the while he was seducing her, he in turn had been seduced. A man had never been caught so completely in his own trap. He could not even pinpoint his initial awareness of this intriguing development. Maybe she had bewitched him the night he had picked her out of the crowded ballroom. What he did know was that from the instant he had touched her, Fayne had been driven to stake his claim on her.

His father’s death and meeting Kilby had urged him to contemplate his future. Thoughts of the damn Solitea curse also lingered in his thoughts. With the title weighing on his shoulders like a mantle hewed from granite, he knew the time had come to embrace his responsibilities and fate. Marriage was a natural step. His mother had been urging him for several years to cease dallying with his mistresses and to find a proper bride. A new Solitea heir was needed, and Fayne was happy to dedicate himself to the pleasurable task.

The coachman called out to the team of horses, alerting Fayne that they had arrived at their destination. Although he was eager to introduce his new bride to his friends and the
ton,
he and Kilby deserved a few days of solitude, giving her time to adjust to her new circumstances.

“Wake up, love,” Fayne said, stroking her face. His finger traced the small bruise on her cheek. It angered him that he had not gotten to her before Nipping had laid a hand on her. Last evening when he had removed her nightgown he
noticed the tiny bruises on her arms and two semicircular teeth marks near her right nipple where the bastard had bitten her. Taking Kilby and her sister away from Nipping was just the beginning. As far as he was concerned, his dealings with the marquess were far from finished.

Kilby covered her yawn with the back of her hand. “Are we in London yet?” she sleepily inquired. Her lower lip pouted in puzzlement as she pondered how she had ended up in Fayne’s lap.

“I told you that we were not traveling directly to town. I have a surprise for you.” He tipped her upright and shifted her off his lap.

The coach halted, and minutes later, the coachman opened the door. “Good afternoon, Your Grace,” the man said, his fingers tugging the brim of his hat. “I trust it was a comfortable journey?”

Kilby smiled at the coachman, accepting the extended hand he politely offered to help her disembark from the coach. “Remarkably so. Thank you,” she said, sending an amused glance at her husband.

Fayne descended the coach after her.

The coachman approached him, carrying a satchel in each hand. He nodded at the house. “Your Grace, I’ll take the bags inside and check to see if everything is in order.”

“Very good, Stevens,” Fayne said, his indulgent gaze fixed on his wife. The man opened the front door and disappeared inside.

“This is a lovely place. Where are we?” Kilby asked, her gaze taking in the large house and wooded landscape.

He absently patted one of the horses harnessed to their coach. “Welcome to Carlisle Park. What do you think of it?”

“It is splendid!” She beamed at him. “How long has it been in your family?”

Fayne removed his hat, and wiped the perspiration from his forehead. He stared at the early Tudor and Elizabethan
manor house. He had little interest in family history. However, his father had drilled into his head at a very early age the importance of knowing one’s assets. “The original house goes back to the late fourteen hundreds. Before Arianrod was built, the manor was used as the family’s county seat. What you see here is what is left of the southeast portion of the original house.”

The house had once been surrounded by six hundred acres of Carlisle land. When the county seat had been moved to Arianrod, interest in the property had waned. Much of the acreage had been sold off, leaving the remaining two hundred and fifty acres. For several generations it had served as a dowager house. Around 1720, the house had been renovated and from that time forward it had been used as a hunting lodge, although the application was rather generalized. The game was abundant for an enthusiastic sportsman. Fayne, however, suspected many of his father’s hunting trips to Carlisle Park included his mistress in the party.

“How long will we be staying?” she asked, returning to his side.

Fayne put his arm casually around her waist. It had been over a year since his last visit to Carlisle Park. Ramscar, Everod, and Cadd had joined him on his two-week stay. “Three days. My father used the place as a hunting lodge. Though the upkeep has been maintained, the house is not currently staffed.”

“Oh,” she said faintly, looking beset by the news. She was a gently bred lady used to directing staff, not seeing to the duties herself. “I suppose you are planning on hunting game to roast in the hearth?”

He took pity on her. “Fortunately, we are not entirely without some assistance. Before we left London, I sent a messenger north to warn the caretaker of our impending visit. I ordered him to open the house and hire a woman to
cook and clean up after us daily.” He hugged her encouragingly. “Not to worry, little wolf, I won’t make you cook for us.”

 

The coachman confirmed the house had been readied and cleaned for their arrival. On his inspection, he had discovered the woman the caretaker had hired was already in the kitchen preparing their evening meal. Her name was Mrs. Agnes Meadows. In her mid-forties, the robust woman had light brown hair and kind bluish-gray eyes. She had told them to call her Aggie.

Kilby decided to explore the house while Fayne assisted the coachman with the horses. The house consisted of a main hall with a groin-vaulted ceiling. Huge, carved mullioned windows adorned the front of the house. Following an ornately carved passageway led her to a stone staircase. Upstairs in one wing was the dining room and drawing room. The other wing included an Elizabethan-style gallery and a round tower, likely a relic of the original house. As she had come to expect from the Carlisles, the house like its owners was eclectic, tasteful, and lavishly appointed.

Fayne found her walking in the courtyard. “Having fun poking around?”

“Yes.” She grinned at him, not denying her curiosity. “I think you have a grand house.”

“I’m pleased. We shall have to make a point of coming here often.”

Her stomach fluttered as a thought occurred to her. By evening, they would have the house to themselves. Aggie intended on returning to her own household each night. As for the coachman, he would reside in the stables. The large building also included sleeping quarters for the grooms.

He caged her with his arms. “Have you settled in yet?”

Kilby sniffed at the ridiculous question. “There was not much to the task since I left town with little more than the
dress on my back,” she retorted, slightly amused by their spontaneous adventure.

She had never embarked on a trip with so few dresses and accessories. Nor had she had so much fun. With Fayne, it was easy to forget the problems that awaited them in London on their return.

While the Brawleys had seemed to accept Fayne’s news that they were eloping to Gretna Green with gracious ease, Kilby still had not met his mother. Privately, she was dreading the meeting. Despite Fayne’s assurances, she doubted the dowager duchess would eagerly embrace, the woman she considered her dead husband’s mistress.

There was Gypsy to consider, too. A stranger had removed her from the only home her sister knew. If she had been in her sister’s predicament, she would have been terrified. Still, there was no help for it. At least Gypsy was safe from Archer’s machinations. As for keeping her brother from retaining custody of Gypsy, Fayne had promised her that would never happen. For some reason she believed him.

When had she started to trust him?

Fayne brought her hand to his lips and kissed her fingers. “What are you pondering?”

“My brother,” she confessed, hating to spoil their quiet time together. “You keep telling me to stop worrying. Nevertheless, I cannot seem to help myself.”

“Your brother is a perverted arse,” Fayne said. His anger over Archer’s attack on Kilby had not diminished. “Why your father trusted him to see to your protection is beyond me.”

“Archer and my father had an awkward relationship,” she said carefully. “My brother stayed away from Ealkin unless he was summoned. Despite their differences, my father would have expected Archer to take care of the family if he could not. I doubt he even glimpsed the twisted man his son had become.”

Fayne placed his hands on her shoulders and laid his forehead affectionately against hers. He sighed. “I wish I possessed the words to calm your fears.”

Kilby rubbed her palm against his chest in a soothing manner. “You took me away from him. That is what matters,” she said, praying he would not come to regret it.

“When I confront him again, I will crush him,” Fayne said, the ruthlessness she had witnessed the day before shining in his harsh green eyes. “Until then . . .”

She shook her head questioningly. “What?”

He lowered his lips to hers. “I will have to dedicate myself to the task of keeping you wholly distracted.”

Kilby offered him her mouth, willingly accepting the satisfying oblivion of Fayne’s kisses.

CHAPTER
EIGHTEEN

The next two days passed too swiftly for his comfort. This time alone with Kilby had been extraordinary. Fayne had never been so aware of a woman before. She was so responsive in his arms. He had thought it impossible that a jaded rake like himself could be taken to such new incredible heights. He did not want the enchantment to end.

Fayne wanted to prolong their stay at Carlisle Park.

“Guess what?”

Kilby had found a scenic spot near the lake under an old willow tree to read a book she had found in one of the rooms in the house. Lost in her story, she peered up at him with a vague smile on her face. “I beg your pardon?”

Fayne plopped down beside her. He was dressed informally, wearing only his shirt and breeches. “We are alone.”

She rolled her eyes heavenward at his declaration. “We have been alone for days, Your Grace.”

He nimbly plucked the book out of her hands and tossed it aside.

“I was reading that!” she said crossly.

He tugged on the ribbons tied into a bow under her chin. “You are not supposed to smile at me when you scold me.” Fayne peeled off her bonnet and it landed on top of the book. “Stevens just departed. It appears Brawley’s coachman is rather bored in our company. He went off to search for livelier fellowship. We might not see him for a week.”

Sensing his mischief, she rolled away from him with the intent to escape. He lunged for her ankle. Dragging her toward him, Fayne rolled Kilby onto her back and pinned her with the length of his body.

“That is unfortunate,” she said, squirming for her freedom. “I thought we were leaving tomorrow?”

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