Taming Charlotte (4 page)

Read Taming Charlotte Online

Authors: Linda Lael Miller

Tags: #Romance, #General, #Fiction

Bless him, Patrick had poured wine into a wooden cup, and he extended this to Charlotte, then sank into his desk chair to regard her in attentive silence.

Charlotte was not accustomed to strong drink, but she
clutched the cup in shaking hands, raised it to her mouth, and drained every drop before rushing on.

“It’s been quite a devastating experience, I can assure you, Mr. Trevarren…”

He frowned, took the cup, filled it again from an elegant carafe. “How do you know my name?”

Charlotte blushed and then gulped down the second cupful of wine. She was both relieved and injured that he did not seem to recall their encounter a decade before, in the high rigging of the
Enchantress.
“We met once,” she said, and then hiccuped. “May I have more wine, please?”

“Certainly not,” he said, with decided disapproval, settling back in his creaky chair with all the assurance of a man who received gifts of naked women every day of the week. “You’re already getting drunk. What you need is some food and, from the looks of you, a bath.”

In all her fantasies about Patrick Trevarren over the years, Charlotte had never once envisioned being received so casually. “Don’t you even want to know my name?” she asked, in a small voice, when her formidable Quade pride was looking the other way.

Mr. Trevarren sighed. Now he’d gone from nonchalance to an attitude of distracted bother, as though he found her arrival tiresome. “All right, then,” he conceded, gesturing. “Who are you?”

Charlotte was stricken by his lack of friendliness, but she wouldn’t have let him see that even for a ticket home to America. She straightened, inside the swirl of soft wool cloaking her, and glared at him. “I don’t intend to tell you,” she said. “There. How does it feel to be treated rudely?”

He rubbed the back of his neck with one hand, the way Charlotte had seen her father do when he was exasperated with her stepmother, Lydia. After that, Patrick rose abruptly from his chair, took hold of her blanket-covered shoulders, and raised her to her feet.

“This is no time for schoolgirl games,” he snapped, glowering down at her.

The moment he relaxed his grasp, Charlotte’s knees folded, and to her abject humiliation, she started to sink back to the floor.

Patrick cursed under his breath, caught her, and swept her up into his arms. He carried her, blanket and all, to the bed, and dropped her ungracefully onto the mattress. The feathery softness all but swallowed her.

Charlotte’s eyes went wide. She had imagined this event innumerable times, but finding herself faced with the reality was another matter entirely. Her throat clenched shut with fear.

Patrick’s manner softened a little, though his size and masculinity still overwhelmed her. He leaned over Charlotte, his hands pushing deep into the mattress on either side of her, and smiled. “I’m not going to hurt you,” he said. His voice was low, mesmerizing. “Now, tell me your name.”

The wine had spread into every tiny tributary of Charlotte’s veins, every cell and pore. Her fear was receding behind a rising wall of darkness, and she yawned. “Aphrodite,” she said. “Daughter of Zeus.”

Picturing her father in a toga, standing atop his personal Mount Olympus on Puget Sound and glaring imperiously down on mere humanity, she giggled.

“Beware the thunderbolts of Zeus,” she warned Patrick, turning sage in the space of a moment. “If my father finds out about this, he’ll be absolutely outraged.”

Patrick sighed and thrust himself away from Charlotte and the mattress. “There’s no point in talking to you now,” he said. “Go ahead and sleep, little goddess.”

She pulled the blanket up under her nose and peered at him over the plain edge. “Don’t you dare ravish me,” she said.

He smiled, and Charlotte was quite dazzled by the flash. “Rest assured, my dear—my taste doesn’t run toward pampered rich girls.”

“Pampered—?!” Charlotte tried to sit up, wanting to offer a vehement protest, but she simply had no strength left to do that. She collapsed against the pillows, closed her eyes, and slept.

Patrick sent a passing sailor for Cochran, who appeared momentarily, bearing a basin of warm water, some liniment, and a stack of clean washing rags. The first mate
looked at the girl for a long moment, then made a
tsk-tsk
sound.

“Poor little thing. She’s been poorly used these past few days, I’m afraid.”

Patrick glanced at her smudged, pale face. Her matted hair was the color of maple syrup, and it would glow in the lantern light once it had been washed and brushed properly.

“What do you mean, ‘used’?” he demanded. He knew he was scowling at Cochran as though the man had done the using personally, but he couldn’t help it.

Cochran smiled, set the things he carried on the stand bolted to the floor beside Patrick’s bed. “I wasn’t speaking of her virtue,” he said. “The kidnappers wouldn’t have lowered her value by enjoying her favors, though God knows they must have been tempted.”

Patrick swallowed hard. He was relieved, but at the same time, for some unfathomable reason, he wanted to grasp his friend’s shirtfront and send him flying backwards against the closest wall. With effort, he managed to control both his temper and, he hoped, the expression on his face.

“She won’t tell me her name.”

“Probably thinks you’re no better than those wasters who nabbed her in the marketplace,” Cochran said with a shrug. “It’s no great wonder if she’s been a little fractious, now is it?”

“I guess not,” Patrick conceded, though somewhat ungenerously.

The vixen stirred in her sleep, turned onto her side, and whimpered softly at the pain the motion caused.

An angry flush surged over Patrick’s jawline.

“They bruised her pretty badly,” Cochran commented in a quiet voice, looking down at the trail of black and blue marks on her bare arm and shoulder. “Maybe we’d better get Ness in here to check her over and bind up any wounds.”

“I’ll tend to her myself,” Patrick said. Once he’d finished speaking, he was embarrassed, because he’d spat the words at his friend like pieces of red-hot lead. He made a forcible effort to calm his renegade emotions. “We’ll find out who she is soon enough—I know she’s from Seattle or thereabouts—and send her home.”

“Yes,” Cochran agreed, somewhat heavily. There was no conviction in his voice. “Just remember that some folks are of a mighty strange turn of mind when it comes to situations like this one.”

“What the hell do you mean by that?”

Cochran had reached the door of the cabin and he paused there, one hand on the latch. “Whether the young lady has been…er…deflowered or not, a lot of papas and mamas would see her as used merchandise, a shame to the family. Not a few would refuse to take her back.”

Looking down at the nameless waif, Patrick saw the child he’d rescued from the rigging so long ago, not the woman she’d become. He felt a twisting sorrow just to imagine her being spurned by the very people who were supposed to love and protect her. “Go now,” he said, in a tone of defeat, and he heard the door close behind Cochran.

With a gentleness he hadn’t had occasion to use since the year he was ten, when his dog had been run down by a carriage and he’d carried the spaniel out of the street, Patrick turned back the blanket. First he washed the lady’s dusty, swollen skin, and then he treated the worst of her scratches with dabs of good brandy. She flinched a few times, but didn’t awaken, not even when he lifted her up and maneuvered her into one of his shirts.

Clearly she was exhausted, and Patrick felt no small amount of tenderness toward her as he stood for a time, watching her sleep. After a while, he turned the lamp down until there was barely any wick to burn, then went up on deck to make sure all was well with the ship.

When he returned, his lovely guest was sleeping on her side. She’d kicked free of the covers, and her long, shapely legs, as white and translucent as the finest porcelain, lay as if she’d been running.

Patrick sat down on the end of the bed, kicked off his boots, then rose to unfasten the buttons of his breeches. He favored the wide-sleeved, open-throated kind of shirt that made him look like a swashbuckler in a three-penny opera, and this he pulled over his head and tossed across the back of his desk chair.

He crawled into bed, next to the wall, settled in with his
customary strenuous stretch and loud, sighing yawn, then turned his back on the waif.

She made a sound in her sleep, shifted, and laid one hand full on Patrick’s right buttock.

He tensed, from his scalp to the soles of his feet, and his member was suddenly as erect as the main mast. Patrick murmured a swear word and reluctantly moved out of her reach, but up on deck, the watches changed and then changed again before he was able to sleep.

When Charlotte awakened, fierce sunshine was pouring in through an open porthole and she was alone in the captain’s quarters. At least, she
assumed
Mr. Trevarren was the captain, since he had such fancy accommodations all to himself and seemed accustomed to ordering people about.

She wriggled up onto the pillows, which were wadded against the plain wall that served as a headboard, and stretched. That was when she realized she was wearing one of Patrick’s shirts, that he must have unwrapped her from the blanket and put the garment on her while she was sleeping.

The idea mortified Charlotte, but she wasn’t about to let it take too much of her energy. Her first thought, upon being delivered to Patrick like a bagful of walnuts plump for the cracking, had been that she was safe now, in the hands of one of her own countrymen. Now, however, as she mulled over the fact that the pillows next to her own still bore the imprint of a head, she wondered.

Horror made Charlotte’s heart lurch. She’d had wine the night before, and she’d been rendered almost witless by the things that had been happening to her. Had she been besmirched?

She spread her legs beneath the blankets and felt herself tentatively with the fingers of one hand, but there was no soreness, no change. There was, however, just the slightest twinge of pleasure at the scandalous thought of Patrick touching her so intimately.

Charlotte slapped both hands down on top of the covers and pulled her legs together with such force that her knees knocked.

A rap sounded at the door, and before Charlotte could call out that she preferred to be alone, the hinges creaked and Patrick strode in, grinning.

Charlotte glowered at him. “It is not proper for you to be in here,” she pointed out.

He laughed. “Wrong. It’s not proper for
you
to be here, goddess. These are, after all, my quarters.”

She pulled the covers up to her cheekbones. “You slept in this bed,” she accused, her voice muffled by the blankets.

“I often do,” Patrick conceded blithely. “Feeling better this morning?”

Charlotte remembered the disturbing excitement she’d felt a few minutes before, and her cheeks grew hot again. “I’m fine. Now, if you’ll just send me home—”

“Gladly.” There was a tray on the desktop, Charlotte noticed, and Patrick was engaged in pouring fragrant Turkish coffee into a cup. “All you have to do is tell me your name.”

It still rankled that he didn’t remember, but she supposed she couldn’t hold that against him forever. “Charlotte,” she said. Instinct stopped her from adding her surname. The Quade name meant wealth and power in Washington Territory, and it was possible that Patrick was not merely the dashing captain of a clipper ship, but a slave trader and kidnapper in the bargain.

If he realized what a high ransom she would command, it might be just the start of her troubles instead of the finish.

He brought the steaming cup to the bedside and offered it, and Charlotte reached out to clasp the handle, being careful to keep the blanket in place at the same time.

“Charlotte,” Patrick said, musing over the name, as though it were some ancient riddle he was anxious to solve. “Charlotte what?”

“Just Charlotte,” she responded, after taking a cautious sip of the strong, hot brew he’d given her.

He narrowed his indigo eyes at her for a moment, and she thought he meant to argue, but then he must have changed his mind. He treated her to another of his bright smiles.

“You’re making this very difficult,” he said pleasantly. “I
have half a mind to sell you when we dock, or hand you over to my friend, Khalif, for his harem.”

Charlotte nearly dropped her coffee. “It is reprehensible of you to make jokes about such things! Don’t you think I’ve been through enough as it is?”

Patrick rolled his eyes. “Not only are you a saucy little wench, and all too friendly of a night, when a man’s trying his best to sleep—”

The cup rattled against the bedside table as Charlotte set it down. “I beg your pardon?”

He laughed and folded his gracefully muscular arms. “I thought that would catch your attention. You and I slept together last night, darling Charlotte, and damned if you didn’t reach out and grab a round place on my anatomy.”

For the first time in her life and, she sincerely hoped, for the last, Charlotte blushed so hard that her face hurt. “I would never do such a thing!” she hissed.

Patrick smiled. “Yes, you would. You did. You’re just lucky I’m such a gentleman, that’s all.”

Charlotte could not believe his audacity; it evidently had no limits. Mr. Patrick Trevarren was decidedly
not
the man she’d spun so many lovely dreams around for ten long years. Her logging camp vocabulary came back to her in a rush.

“Don’t you dare call yourself a gentleman in my presence, you bloody bushwhacker—you sorry son of the devil’s donkey—”

Patrick gave another startling burst of laughter and bowed low. “Why, you’re very welcome, Miss Charlotte No-name. No need to regale me with your thanks!”

“Get out!” Charlotte screamed.

“This is my cabin,” Patrick replied, unruffled. “If anybody gets out, goddess, it’s going to be you.”

“Gladly! Just give me some clothes and I’ll be gone so fast, you’ll think you imagined me!”

Her fury seemed to amuse Patrick, which only made her angrier.

Whistling, he opened a chest in a corner of the compact room and took out a pair of black breeches and a wide leather belt. He flung the items to her, and they landed askew on the bed.

Other books

Border Angels by Anthony Quinn
Ollie's Easter Eggs by Olivier Dunrea
The Back Building by Julie Dewey
Heartbreaker by Susan Howatch
Beloved Warrior by Patricia Potter
Refuge by Andrew Brown