so determined to revisit our past, let’s do so, but let’s get the facts correct. Thirteen years ago,
“You didn’t know how much it would hurt.”
“True.” She tightened her grip on her arms, and tried not to think about boxing his ears; he was so damned male. Holding his gaze, she went on, “However, I did know I was a virgin, and you”-she managed not to glance down-“were you. I wasn’t so ignorant I didn’t expect the experience to be attended by some degree of pain.”
“A considerable degree of pain.” His jaw was so clenched she was surprised it didn’t crack.
She shrugged, deliberately dismissive. “However one measures pain.” It
His eyes remained narrowed, boring into hers. “You were hurt, upset-you almost cried.” He knew she rarely did. “If it wasn’t the pain, then what the hell was it?”
When she didn’t answer, he spread his arms wide. “For God’s sake-
The torment in his eyes-something he wouldn’t have felt let alone shown years ago-stopped her breath, stopped her from ripping back at him.
Lips compressing, she held his dark gaze. She couldn’t tell him the truth. If he ever learned she’d loved him… given their present situations, he might well press for marriage. He’d see it as an honorable obligation on the one hand and a suitable alliance for them both. And it would be suitable on many levels, except one.
She loved him still, and having to marry him knowing he didn’t love her would, for her, be hell on earth. She’d rejected her other suitors because they hadn’t loved her, and she hadn’t loved them. Now, after all her years of dogged independence, of refusing to marry without the love she craved, to be pressured to marry Charles of all men, and very possibly jockeyed into it…
Her eyes steady on his, she quietly said, “It wasn’t anything you did.”
Charles read her eyes, confirmed she was telling the truth. Confusion swamped him. After all these years, he was still at sea; he hadn’t understood then, and nothing had changed.
Except, perhaps, his persistence; this time he wasn’t going to play the gentleman and let her fob him off. Lowering his arms, he searched her eyes, casting about for some other approach, some other way to draw an explanation of what he didn’t know, and now desperately wanted and needed to know, from her.
Eventually, he quietly, evenly, said, “You haven’t answered my question.”
Penny blinked, thought back, fleetingly gave thanks as her temper sparked. She refocused on his eyes, studied them, narrowed hers. “What are you thinking? That what happened in the barn that day blighted my life?”
“Can you swear to me that what happened that day hasn’t stopped you from being with other men?”
“
Charles couldn’t remember when last he’d dined at that particular table; he clenched his jaw and held back a retort.
She glared at him, then gestured dismissively and swung away. “If you insist on feeling guilty for causing me pain that day, then do so, but don’t you
He held her gaze for a heartbeat, then reached for her, pulled her to him, and kissed her.
As always, desire leapt to instant life; between them, the flames
He broke the kiss. Lifted his head just enough to look into her eyes. “
She opened her lips.
Brusquely, he shook his head. “Don’t bother pretending-we both know you will. You’ll let me, but not any other man. All those years ago, you wanted me to seduce you, you encouraged me-and yes, I remember every tantalizing, fraught, uncertain minute. And now…” His gaze was so hard, so sharp, she wondered he couldn’t cut through and see her soul. “Now you’ll be with me, but not any other man.
Because, God help her, she loved him still. It took a moment for her wits to formulate a useful answer; she didn’t rush them. Drawing a breath restricted by their embrace, she didn’t try to escape his gaze, but calmly held it. “I told you.
Something leapt behind the dark blue screens of his eyes; her breath was suddenly even shorter.
“Be that as it may…” Eyes locked on his, increasingly watchful, she tried to ease back, out of his hold, but his arms gave not an inch. “You shouldn’t presume on that previous invitation, not after all these years.”
As always with her, Charles felt…not quite in control. “Forget your previous invitation.” He bent his head, brushed her lips-just enough to refocus her attention on what was, still, burning between them. “Issue another.”
His voice had lowered of its own accord. He watched, following the battle within her, between physical desire on the one hand and a desire to escape it on the other. She distrusted getting caught, enmeshed in physical desire-and he was the only man capable of weaving a web strong enough to hold her; in that instant, he saw that much clearly.
It only led to the next
Her palms on his chest, she tried to push back. “Your mission. You’re supposed to be keeping watch, remember?”
“I haven’t forgotten.” He had no intention of letting her escape, her desire, his, or the strands they wove together. “If anyone comes driving or riding up, I’ll hear them. If Nicholas sends to the stables, I’ll hear that, too.”
“What if he goes out walking?”
“He can’t leave the house without walking on gravel-I’ll hear him.”
“He might creep out.”
“Why? He doesn’t know we’re here watching.”
She looked at him, thought, frowned.
He smiled, blatantly intent. “That’s check-”
“Wait!” She was starting to panic. “What about the reason you insisted I come home to Wallingham? It was so you wouldn’t seduce me-remember?”
His smile deepened. “So I wouldn’t seduce you
Her jaw fell. “Your own…?”
“There are a few elements of honor not even I will compromise-that’s one of them.”
When she simply stared, dumbfounded, he lowered his head. “And mate.”
CHAPTER
HE INTENDED TO DO PRECISELY THAT, WITH HER, AS SOON as possible. For now, however…he kissed her. For now it was enough that he had her in his arms, that regardless of all else he’d secured his second chance. He