Rebel Enchantress

Read Rebel Enchantress Online

Authors: Leigh Greenwood

WORDS OF LOVE

 

“Hasn’t anyone ever told you you’re absolutely beautiful?”

Delilah shook her head. “Pretty, but not absolutely beautiful.”

“That he lies awake at night thinking about you?” She shook her head again.

“Then I’m certain no one ever told you what wonderfully expressive eyes you have.”

“No.”

Nathan moved closer. “Or that to have you within reach and not be able to caress your skin is a temptation almost greater than a mortal man can endure.”

“No.”

He moved closer still. “That your lips are an irresistible invitation to kiss you.”

“No” Her response was a little breathless.

“I’ve spent days thinking of ways to get you out of the kitchen so I can see you as much as possible. Every beautiful woman should know she’s appreciated.” He reached out and touched her cheek.

“How would you do that?”

“It’s very simple.” He drew so close she could almost feel the heat of his body. “You let her know what you like about her.”

Delilah felt paralyzed. She had never had a man court her this way.

“I particularly like your lips,” Nathan murmured. Their lips were now so close they almost touched. “They are so full and red and wanting to be kissed.” His fingertip traced the outline of her mouth. Then he leaned closer and kissed her….

Other books by Leigh Greenwood:

THE RELUCTANT BRIDE

THE INDEPENDENT BRIDE

SEDUCTIVE WAGER

SWEET TEMPTATION

WICKED WYOMING NIGHTS

WYOMING WILDFIRE

SCARLET SUNSET, SILVER NIGHTS

THE CAPTAIN’S CARESS

ARIZONA EMBRACE

The
Night Riders
series:

TEXAS HOMECOMING

TEXAS BRIDE

BORN TO LOVE

The Cowboys
series:

THE MAVERICKS

JAKE

WARD

BUCK

DREW

SEAN

CHET

MATT

PETE

LUKE

The
Seven Brides
series:

ROSE

FERN

IRIS

LAUREL

DAISY

VIOLET

LILY

Rebel
Enchantress

 

Leigh Greenwood

Copyright © 1992, 2011 Leigh Greenwood

Rebel
Enchantress

 

Table of Contents

 

Title Page

Copyright Page

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-one

Chapter Twenty-two

Chapter Twenty-three

Chapter Twenty-four

Chapter Twenty-five

Epilogue

Author’s Note

About the Author

Chapter One

 

Springfield, Massachusetts, 1786

 

The closer Delilah came to Maple Hill, the more nervous she became. Public opinion labeled Ezra Buel a mean, sour-tempered, stingy old man, a River God, one of the rich men who’d built their mansions along the banks of the Connecticut River, but his reputation had never mattered to her before. Nothing he did had touched her directly. But that would no longer be so.

Gossip had it Ezra built the mansion from profits made during the War of Independence, but it was the sheer size of the white clapboard structure that overwhelmed Delilah. It sat atop a hill overlooking the river, dominating the countryside like a sleeping giant.

Odd that a house could be so intimidating. Even more unusual that it should give the people inside an importance they wouldn’t have had by themselves. She might tell herself Serena Noyes and her daughter were ordinary people like herself, but as she stood gazing at the house, an outsider about to ask for something they could give or withhold, they didn’t seem like ordinary people.

Still, she couldn’t afford to give in to her fears now: Only Reuben’s oxen stood between them and hunger.

She stopped at the bottom of the shallow steps. Who would answer her knock? Did rich people open their own doors, or did they get somebody else to do it for them? It seemed a waste of time to set anybody such a simple task, but then, rich people were different. They couldn’t live in a house like that and not be changed.

She would be if she lived in such a house. She’d stay in bed until noon. That pleasant thought soothed her nerves until she found herself on the porch. Then she started to tremble. Hundreds of reasons why she should go back home flashed through her mind. She didn’t want to be here, she had fought against it most of the spring and summer, but die thought of her two little nephews wondering why they should have to leave the table hungry, die fear on their faces at die tense silences between their parents, stiffened her resolve. She might be afraid—well, she was afraid—but she wasn’t a coward.

Her first, tentative knock made almost no sound. The massive door appeared to have been sculpted from a single piece of wood, though Delilah knew it had been pieced and carved by skillful hands. Taking hold of her courage, she grasped die brass knocker and gave it a strong whack. The report of metal against metal sounded so loudly she involuntarily jumped back. But after several moments passed and still no one came, Delilah began to wonder if anyone was home.

Was she supposed to go to the back door? If a farmhouse had a second door, it led to me barn or the cow pen, and no one expected a guest to use it. But these people were different. Maybe their front door was just for other rich people.

Well, she might be poor and she might be offering herself to do a servant’s work, but until they offered her a job and she accepted it, she would enter by the front door or no door at all. Pride bolstering her courage, she reached for the knocker once more. The door opened without warning.

“Can I help you?”

Delilah felt as if she’d been turned to stone. The most attractive man she had ever seen stood before her. For the moment not even his heavy British accent registered. She frantically searched her mind for who he might be. She had prepared herself only for Ezra Buel, his sister, or his niece. She didn’t know what to say to this man.

He had beautiful eyes. Light blue and clear as a summer sky. His gorgeous mouth, full lips smiling now, parted to show strong white teeth. He had a splendid face—clean-shaven, clear-skinned, handsome.

He was tall, with broad shoulders, slim hips, and was dressed in a style unlike anything Delilah had ever seen. Rather than the usual brown waistcoat and plain coat, he wore a white embroidered waistcoat with a blue broadcloth coat. Instead of a carelessly knotted cloth at his throat, his silk neckcloth was tied into a small, neat bow. His blond-brown hair was not long and garnered at the back of the neck by a ribbon, but was cut short in a style she found new and most attractive.

Whereas the men Delilah knew wore rough boots and loose or ill-fitting breeches, he wore low-cut leather shoes decorated with silver buckles, stockings which clung to his muscled calves, and tight-fitting fawn-colored breeches which emphasized his muscular thighs.

And everything else!

Delilah felt a rush of heat surge through her. Good God, his breeches were indecent. The English must be depraved to go about dressed like that.

He looked her over with a critical eye, his expression becoming less welcoming as his gaze took in the quality and cut of her dress, the dusty condition of her shoes, the absence of any means of transportation or an accompanying servant. He scrutinized her exactly as Ezra Buel would have done.

“Are you certain you have die correct house?” he asked.

Delilah bridled instantly. The implication was unmistakable: No one at Maple Hill could possibly have anything to do with the likes of her.

“I’m certain,” she said with a confidence she didn’t fell. “I wish to come in.”

For a moment she thought he was going to close the door in her face. But after a slight pause, during which Delilah was sure he wondered if she had come to steal the silverware, he stepped aside to allow her to enter.

As his gaze wandered over her person—Delilah had undergone this kind of scrutiny too many times before to misunderstand—his expression began to indicate curiosity, even speculation. Delilah refused to let herself think about what must be going through his mind. She could deal with that later.

Her step was firm and confident, even though her mind still grappled with the unexpected meeting. A slight feeling of uneasiness settled about her when he closed the door and plunged them both into near darkness. A moment later he opened the door to a sunlit drawing room.

Delilah had never even imagined such a room. An Aubusson rug echoed the delicate pink of the tinted walls. Three circular inlaid mahogany card tables, separated by mahogany side chairs upholstered in pink damask, stood against the wall. The windows were adorned with mull curtains crowned with pink, blue, and gold brocade swags. A massive rolltop desk stood between the far windows. A table bearing a Sèvres tea set stood in the center of the room, surrounded by four brocade-covered chairs. An enormous gilt mirror over a pink marble fireplace magnified the splendor of the room. The heavy fragrance of tuberoses, underlaid by a hint of lemon-oil beeswax, filled her nostrils.

“My aunt and cousin are away from home at the moment,” the young man said as he helped her to a seat.

Staggered by the double shock, Delilah had to fight to regain her wits. The young man didn’t help. His gaze never left her. Having finished his study of her body, he focused on her face as though by sheer force of will he could unlock the secrets of her mind. She felt breathless, distracted.

“I came to see Mr. Buel,” she managed to say.

“My uncle is quite ill,” the young man said. The doctor won’t allow anyone to see him at present.”

“But I must see him,” Delilah replied, reeling from still another shock. “It’ll only take a moment.” She was so nervous she felt nauseated.

“You could come back in a few weeks.”

“That’ll be too late. I’ve got to see him now.”

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