Beyond A Wicked Kiss (56 page)

Read Beyond A Wicked Kiss Online

Authors: Jo Goodman

"No."

"We test your mettle here. I am of the opinion that you will prove your worth to us in many ways. Come, I wish to see if I am right." Grasping Ria by her pinned wrists, he led her to the wall opposite the fireplace and pointed to the hook above her head. "The cuffs are more difficult to secure, but I believe you can manage the thing."

Ria felt her knees weaken, but she remained standing. She understood very well why he had chosen this wall, this hook. Her placement here was so she would be in full view of anyone looking through the panel. She could not tell if it had been opened—the play of light and shadow on the wall hid it from her—but she suspected the adjoining room was no longer lighted, so that someone could observe without being seen.

She raised her arms over her head as she had seen Jane do, then lifted herself on her toes to catch the hook. The posture strained her arms. It required two attempts before she was able to slide the cuffs over the hook, but her effort was rewarded by a slight easing of the tension in her shoulders. She resisted the instinct to try to free herself. It was what Sir Alex expected, she thought, and in this small way she could refuse to comply.

"Beautiful." Sir Alex stepped slightly to one side and made a study of her form. "It is unfortunate that you crossed Beckwith in the carriage. The bruises will not be easily masked. Lord Herndon does not like the petals of his flowers crushed and I am inclined to take his side. Beckwith, though, is not so particular. He finds pleasure inflicting a certain amount of pain, and almost as much again in seeing the evidence of it. We are not all of that bent, Miss Ashby." He placed his fingers in her pale hair and drew some of it forward then followed the curling tip of it until his hand was covering her breast. "Have you been thinking about the tasting? Who do you think will outlast all the others?"

Ria knew he expected an answer. "I collect it will be you."

Sir Alex Cotton gave a bark of laughter. "Very good. Yes, I shall certainly wager on myself." His hand dropped away from her breast and rested on her hip a moment. "But what of Westphal? Could he do us all one stroke better?"

Ria's mouth was dry as dust. Her tongue cleaved to the roof of her mouth.

"Will you take some wine?" Sir Alex asked. At her nod, he went to the adjoining door, knocked twice, and waited for it to open. He was gone less than a minute and returned with a glass of claret. "I will hold it for you." He placed the rim of the glass against her lips and tilted it carefully. He did not remove it until she had drunk deeply. The wine stained Ria's perfectly shaped mouth the color of rubies. "Lovely."

Ria closed her eyes as he bent his head and laid his lips across hers. She tried not to give him the satisfaction of her resistance, but it was impossible not to hold herself still when he pressed himself hard against her and forced his tongue past her teeth. The hand that was on her hip slipped between her thighs, and she jerked wildly when the batiste gown proved itself no barrier to his probing fingers.

Sir Alex lifted his head, but he did not remove his hand. "Well?" he asked. "What of Westphal?"

* * *

Beckwith slid the panel closed and opened the shutters on the lantern he held. Light bathed the small chamber and illuminated the hard features of the man at his side. "How do you think she answered?" he asked. "Will she flatter Sir Alex, or will she tell him that you will win the wager?"

West's fingers uncurled slowly. They were stiff and very nearly bloodless from being held for so long in tightly clenched fists. "What do you want, Beckwith?"

"It is not just for me, you understand. It is for the Society."

"Yes. Name it."

"You must prove yourself first, I think." He regarded West for a long moment, as though still considering his offer. "Then you will give us the colonel in exchange for your whore."

Chapter 16

Ria bit her lip to keep from calling after Sir Alex as he left the room. Her arms and shoulders ached from the unnatural position she was forced to maintain. To support her weight, she had to stand on pointed toes; the muscles in her calves and thighs burned with the effort. He did not say how long he would be gone, only that he had other matters to attend. She thought he would release her. He had toyed with her cuffs as if he meant to, but then he'd merely run his palm down the length of her arm, smiled with disarming appeal, and left her alone to contemplate what, exactly, was to be her fate.

She wondered if she was being watched even now. Were the bishops wagering on whether she would try to free herself? It was tempting to glare in the direction of the panel, just as it was tempting to struggle against the iron bands, but Ria resisted both temptations because of Jane. No matter that Sir Alex tried to distinguish himself from Beckwith when it came to inflicting pain—Ria knew very well they were cut from the same cloth.

She closed her eyes. There were other kinds of escape, she thought, ones the bishops could not so easily prevent. In her mind's eye, Ria saw the lake at Ambermede. The summer grass was high, and it tickled her knees as she ran for the water's edge. She plucked one of the blades and raised it to her lips. Her cheeks puffed as she tried to make a whistle of it. The note she hit was shrill to her own ears and perfectly annoying to those around her. Her mother called, "Ria. Ria, come here."

She did not go, of course. She did not even consider going. The sun was warm on her face and a light breeze ruffled her hair. The water beckoned her more powerfully than her mother. She abandoned the blade of grass in favor of spinning like a top, arms extended wide as if she could embrace the entire world in them. "Ria," her father called to her. She paid him as little heed as she had her mother. "Maria." Ah, she must be behaving badly if someone was moved to intone her Christian name. "Reee-a!"

She giggled. Why should she go to them? she wondered. It seemed infinitely more important that they should join her. She would take another blade of grass and play the pied piper for them. Her mother, her father, the duke... all of them would leave their blankets and step lively to her tune. She spun away, showing them as splendid a form as a Paris opera dancer, her arms gracefully curved above her, her long legs elegantly lifted
en pointe.
"Ria." A chorus of voices called to her, and she blithely ignored the accolades of her audience. Let them come to her, she thought again. Let them come.

"Ria." West yanked on the pin that coupled Ria's cuffs. She moaned softly as her arms fell limply to her sides. He pulled her roughly against him and held her there, letting her use all of him for support. Her head rested heavily against his shoulder. His hard embrace was all that kept her standing.

"You came," she whispered. "I knew you would. The others, too. I said let them come to me and they did. I knew if I played for them, they would come." It was almost too great an effort to smile, but somehow her lips managed to press that sweet curve against his coat. "How simple it all is, really."

"Shh."

Was it a secret? she wondered. Or did he only mean that she shouldn't talk? It didn't matter. There was nothing else she wanted to say just now. He was lifting her in his arms and everything was just as it should be.

West set Ria on the bed. She tried to hold onto him as he straightened, but he could see her arms had no strength left in them. She was able to keep them raised for only a few moments before they fell heavily back to the mattress. It was an agony for West to step outside of her reach. To reassure her, he said, "I'm not going anywhere."

Ria regarded him with alarm. "Why not?"

He placed one restraining hand on her shoulder before she could try to struggle up to her elbows. "Allow me to give you my coat."

It was no answer to her question, and Ria was beginning to think clearly enough to realize it. "I want to leave this place."

"No more than I want you gone." He removed his frock coat and helped her sit up long enough to place it around her shoulders. "You should put it on properly."

"This is better," she told him softly. "As if your arms are still around me." Ria had not meant to cause him pain, yet that was the precise nature of what she saw cross his face and come to reside in his eyes. "It's all right. You have nothing to answer for." She was able to lay one hand over his just before he withdrew from her side. Turning her head so she could follow his movements, Ria watched him use the toe of his boot to nudge the logs in the fireplace. One of them turned over and blazed to life. She smiled as he jumped back to avoid the licking, leaping flames.

West turned and gestured to the fire. "Would you like to sit here and warm yourself?"

Ria shook her head. "Mr. Beckwith warned me that this garment flashes like a candlewick." She did not miss the grim twist of West's lips, even though it came and went in the space of a single blink. "It doesn't matter now," she said. "You have banished all of the bishops."

"There are always bishops."

"Then you have banished these bishops. It is a good beginning in some respects. A better ending in others."

West approached the bed. One of the blankets lay in a mound at the foot, the other had fallen to the floor. He picked up both, spread them open between his arms, then covered Ria and tucked them around her. He saw that she expected something more from him—his arms under her, perhaps, lifting her, taking her first toward the door, and then beyond it. Sitting at the edge of the bed, West took one of Ria's hands in his. He brushed the iron wristcuff. She was watching him closely now, and he managed not to wince at the feel of this cold, alien hardware under his fingertips.

"I would remove this if I could," he said. "You know that, don't you?"

Ria's eyes darted to her wrist. She saw his thumb run across the edge of the cuff. Odd, she thought, that he had been touching her there and she had not known it. She looked back at him. "Sir Alex has the key."

"Yes. I know."

Her brow puckered slightly as she considered what this meant. "You were watching when he was here?"

He nodded.

Ria's fingers tightened in his. "For how long?"

"You were lying here when I first saw you. I thought you were asleep, but I came to realize you were not. Miss Petty and Cotton came in shortly afterward, and you seemed to know it immediately."

"But if you were there..." Ria realized she still did not understand. "Why didn't you—" She stopped because he was shaking his head.

"I couldn't go to you," he said. "I didn't dare make the attempt." He could still hear Beckwith graphically describing what would happen to Ria if there was the slightest misstep on his part. Even now, if he was not careful, the end might be the same. Perhaps he had already said more than he should have. It was hard to know. Beckwith had not been clear as to how much leeway he would be allowed in negotiating this end for the bishops. The fact that the doors remained closed was a good sign that he was still within the limits they had in mind. West did not believe there would have been any hesitation to come in and drag him from the room.

"We are not leaving, are we?" There was so little inflection in Ria's voice that it was hardly a question.

"No. Not yet."

Ria nodded. Her eyes darted toward the panel, and then she looked at West for confirmation of the thing she dared not ask.

He squeezed her hand and saw, more than heard, her soft intake of breath. In that small way, she communicated her understanding.

"They call it a tasting," Ria whispered.

The words had barely any sound and West had to bend his head to hear her. "Yes," he said. "I heard Sir Alex tell you."

"Of course. I forgot—you were there."

West tugged at the blanket until it rested just below her breasts. He laid open one half of his coat and stretched the wide neckline of her shift over her shoulder so the bruise he had glimpsed before was laid bare. "Beckwith?"

Her nod was almost imperceptible. She knew he saw it because he looked as if he might be moved to murder. Perhaps he would be, she thought. But not now. Now he was treading carefully, even with her, especially with her. Ria understood they were being observed, but it did not account for every aspect of caution that she sensed in West. He was uncertain of her, she realized. It hurt a little that he could not trust her responses entirely, but she also acknowledged his good sense. She did not think she would give the game away in the event he told her what it was, but she was not sure.

Other books

Dance of Death by Edward Marston
Nobody Knows by Kyra Lennon
Going Home Again by Dennis Bock
Tempting the Jaguar by Reus, Katie
Capitol Conspiracy by William Bernhardt