A Sister's Quest (27 page)

Read A Sister's Quest Online

Authors: Jo Ann Ferguson

BOOK: A Sister's Quest
10.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Fair? Very little is in life.”

“Alexei!”

He sighed. “All right, Michelle. They were shooting at us—or at me, if you prefer. You are right. They could not have known that Damrosch was with us.”

“Then who are they? Will they try again?”

“I don't know.”

“You do not … How many enemies do you have?”

“All I need is one who wants me dead.”

Closing her eyes, Michelle sagged into her chair. When she had been at St. Bernard's School for Girls and had longed for adventure, she had not considered it would take such a horrible turn as this.

Alexei's hand covered hers. She looked at him, startled, as her heart pounded. Did he know that she wanted his touch even more than she wanted answers to her questions? Could he guess that she had instigated this conversation in hopes of rebuilding what had been destroyed at the moment those guns had fired?

“Michelle, you know me. Don't you think I would have done something about those bastards by now if I had known who they were?” he asked.

“Yes,” she whispered. Transfixed by his strong emotions, she stared, unable to say more.

“Then trust me to do as I must.”

“And me?”

His brow ruffled. “What of you?”

“Trust me to do what I must.” Pulling her hand from beneath his, she curved it along his face as her mouth slanted across his.

His hand caught her face, drawing her back. Then, with a moan, he leaned forward so his lips touched hers tentatively, as if he feared hurting her. She sighed with eagerness. At the sound, his gentleness disappeared as he pressed her back into the settee. Her need for him burst forth, refusing to be fettered again. He decorated her face with scintillating kisses as he sat beside her. When his hand moved up her breast, heated liquid flowed deep within her, leaving a river of rapture in its wake.

Slowly he opened the neckline of her wrapper. He was careful not to touch her sling as he bent to place his lips against the curves above her lacy chemise. Her fingers twisted through his hair as his tongue slid along her.

This was what she wanted. This was what she was willing to risk anything to have again.

He gazed down into her eyes as he loosened the sash at her waist. His hand paused at the sound of boots on the landing.

Michelle watched Alexei's face harden. “No,” she whispered, “it is not wrong to hold me like this.”

His hand stroked her cheek. “I know. Wait here.”

He stood and walked to the door, pausing to pull a poker from the hearth. He raised it at an assertive knock.

“No!” cried Michelle. “Alexei, it is Bartholomew!”

Alexei muttered his favorite curse as he put the poker aside and reached for the knob.

Bartholomew frowned as Alexei opened the door; then a superior smile twisted his lips. “Good afternoon, Vatutin.”

“Your Highness.”

“Is Fraulein D'Orage at home?”

Alexei gave a terse laugh. “Where do you expect her to go when she has a broken arm and can walk about only by leaning on the furniture?”

“Will you tell her I am here?”

“Let me see if she is at home for you, Your Highness.” Rudely he turned his back on Bartholomew. “Michelle, are you at home for Prince Charming?”

Hearing a grumble beyond the door, Michelle swallowed her laughter.
Poor Bartholomew!
He had added to his worthlessness, in Alexei's opinion, by arriving now. It was tempting to blame Bartholomew for his poor timing, but she must not. “Please have Bartholomew come in. I will push the kettle over the fire.”

“You shall do nothing!” Alexei said in the same tight voice. “If you do not promise to sit and forget a hostess's duties, I will not allow Prince Charming in.”

“Alexei,” she cautioned.

“Promise.”

“Yes, I promise.”

“Very good.” He stepped aside, letting the door open wider.

Bartholomew brushed past Alexei and dropped to his knees by her chair. “My dear, how wondrous to see you well enough to be here.” He suddenly frowned. “I can see you and your
employer
were not expecting callers.”

Michelle followed Bartholomew's gaze to where her dressing gown gaped. She kept her smile in place as she tightened the sash. “While wearing this sling, I am most comfortable in my wrapper.” Uneasily, when he glowered at Alexei, she went on, “I thought you had gone home, and had not heard that you had returned to Vienna.”

“With clearer instructions from your father, no doubt.” Alexei crossed the room and sat beside her. He showed no sign of any weakness while Bartholomew was in the room.

Bartholomew got up and clasped his hands behind his back. “This is a social call, Vatutin. If you wish to discuss the Congress, I suggest you remember that such things might bore Michelle.”

“Michelle bored with politics?” He laughed, but his expression remained cold. “Michelle is as astute as many of the delegates. Mayhap because she has suffered the anguish created by war.”

Before Bartholomew could snarl a retort, Michelle said, “Gentlemen, please recall that I can speak for myself. Sit, Bartholomew, and tell us how the news of the Congress has been received in Coxe-Saxony-Colburg.”

When Bartholomew sat and began a list of his misadventures of trying to cross the mountains, Alexei listened closely and noticed that Michelle was as well. If this was her attempt to show him that she could be a good partner in his work as well as a delight in his bed, there had been no need. He wanted her in his life and in his arms. But to risk her again … He sighed. There had to be an answer. That was something else Sophie had taught him. There always was a way out of any problem. If he found it, he could have his work and Michelle, too.

Asking questions each time Prince Charming faltered, Alexei realized Michelle was watching him. He smiled at her, and her eyes glowed with longing. He struggled to heed Prince Charming, although the chance of learning something valuable from this addle-wit was slight. He would much rather throw Prince Charming out and pull Michelle into his arms.

She asked a question, and the princeling babbled in his attempt to please her. Alexei smiled. She possessed a rare intelligence that outshone even Sophie's … and his own. Her touch had beguiled every thought from his head, especially his determination to keep her safe. There
had
to be a solution to this dilemma that would protect her from his enemies and still have her sparkling like the brightest star in a winter sky as she lit his nights with ecstasy.

The droning sound of Prince Charming's voice disappeared as Alexei met Michelle's gaze. In her eyes glowed the desire ravaging him. When he started to move his hand to cover hers, he cursed silently at the bandages encasing his fingers. Soon the bandages would be gone. Then his craving would show pretty, luscious Michelle exactly how much he wanted her. First he had to make sure she was safe. There
must
be some way to do that.

You have to give up everything you love in order to do what you must
.

For the first time, Sophie's voice echoing in his head annoyed him. He cursed silently. She had taught him well, but that admonition was one he did not want to accept. He would find a way to have both his work and Michelle. How, he was not sure, but he would. Then he would remind Michelle of the pleasure neither of them could forget.

It would be worth the wait.

Chapter Seventeen

Michelle watched as Herr Doktor Telemann lifted off the bandages that had been on her arm for nearly two months. When she saw the dried blood on the bottom ones, she shuddered. She did not close her eyes as he cut away the layers of filthy linen. The sight before her was not as horrible as her memories of that terrifying night. Her eyes widened as she saw the scar where the ball had struck her.

Fresh air wafted along her skin as the doctor ordered, “Extend your fingers, Fraulein.”

She tried, surprised at how cramped they were.

“Do they hurt?” he asked.

“Just stiff.”

“And your arm. Bend your elbow. Up first.”

She grimaced as her bones creaked from disuse, but her elbow obeyed better than her fingers had. Her smile of pride vanished when he gently touched her forearm.

At her moan, he asked, “Still tender?”

“Yes,” she whispered, biting her lip.

“This will take but a moment.”

Frau Schlissel came to hold Michelle's hand as the doctor completed his examination. When Michelle's fingers tightened, she feared she was hurting the older woman, but Frau Schlissel said nothing.

“This looks excellent, Fraulein,” the doctor said. “A light bandage should be sufficient.”

“And the sling?”

“You should wear it for a while longer. If you go out, you must wear it. However, when you are sitting quietly, you should take it off for a few minutes and stretch your arm.” He wagged a finger at her. “Only for a few minutes. To do too much too swiftly can harm it. Be sensible, Fraulein, and you should regain full use of your arm. You realize how lucky you are, don't you?”

“Yes,” she said as Frau Schlissel retied the sling behind her neck. “Herr Doktor Telemann, what about Alexei?”

He closed his bag. “As soon as I examine him, I will know.”

Michelle accepted the scold as her due. Sliding off the bed, she wiggled her fingers and said, “Forgive me, Herr Doktor. I have trouble being patient.”

“Mayhap, Fraulein D'Orage, but you have been an excellent patient. Mayhap that is why you are recovering better than I had hoped.”

“Did you consider it might be because you are an excellent doctor?”

He chuckled. “I can understand how you have charmed Vienna. If you are as flattering to everyone you have met as you are to this old doctor, you must have them all begging at your feet.”

Heat climbed her cheeks. In the past two months while living here quietly, she had given her tongue free rein. She must be careful to watch what she said when she and Alexei were again among the delegates to the Congress, for those diplomats would twist every word she said.

“Do you want help putting away those clothes?” Frau Schlissel asked when the doctor had gone into the other room.

Michelle picked up the small pile. “Thank you, but no. I am glad to have something to do.”

“Then I shall return to the kitchen and begin supper.”

“A victory supper?”

The housekeeper's eyes twinkled merrily. “That sounds just fine, Fraulein.”

Going to the cupboard at the side of her room, Michelle opened the door. She put the clothes on a shelf and started to close the door. With a frown, she bent and looked at where the fabric on the inside of the door had come loose.

An arm snaked around her waist and drew her back against Alexei's hard body. She sighed with undeniable desire as his tongue tickled her earlobe. His finger traced her sling across her throat and along the front of her wrapper. When his hand slipped beneath it to curve around her breast, a craving resonated deep within her.

“Can this come off?” he whispered as he touched the sling. His breath sent quivers along her.

“At night,” she struggled to say past her ragged breath. “When we are alone and it is quiet, I am supposed to exercise my hand.”

“Perfect,
Liebchen
. I can give you the perfect exercise for your hand. Touch me.” He laughed softly as he pulled her to her feet and whirled her to face him.

“Alexei!”

He touched the black patch that covered his eye. “So do I look like a rogue?”

For a long minute, she did not answer. Against his golden hair, the ebony blotch was even more conspicuous. Her fingers trembled as she reached up to the thread holding it in place. “Does your eye hurt?”

“No, but the results of being shot and having the wound become infected are best concealed.” He grinned. “Actually, I think the patch is quite dashing.”

“It should cause some problems if you wish to go from being Alexei Vatutin to someone else.”

Putting his arm around her shoulders, he squeezed gently. “With all the men wounded from the war, no one will notice another.” He looked past her. “Is something wrong with your armoire?”

“The fabric was loose, and I was trying to fix it.”

“Let me help.”

“A roguish pirate would not offer to do that.”

“No, he would offer to do this.” He kissed her swiftly, and she smiled as he knelt to poke at the fabric. Her fingers twisted through his hair. “Ah, here is the problem. The fabric came away from its brad. There. Fixed.”

“Thank you.”

Getting to his feet, he swept his arm around her, pulling her up to his chest again. “So,
Liebchen
, do you want to go dancing tonight?”

“Dancing? Tonight?” She stepped out of his arms so he could not discover how she trembled at the thought. Attending a ball threatened to throw her back into the miasma of horrifying memories.

He cupped her chin. “You cannot cower here forever. Neither can I. There is a party at a French diplomat's house tonight. Come with me,
Liebchen
.”

“Of course. You will need me to translate.”

“Not only that,” he murmured as he leaned her cheek against his shoulder. “I need you in my arms as we whirl to the music.”

She had no chance to answer as he captured her lips as easily as he had captured her heart. She was willing to go anywhere with him, even if it meant going again through the hell they had suffered. She suspected that vow would be tested.

Soon.

Frau Schlissel did not seem surprised when Michelle told her they were going out and she needed help getting dressed. Although the housekeeper prattled, Michelle sensed her disquiet.

Wearing a white gown with a pale pink overdress instead of her wrapper was a pleasure. Frau Schlissel loosened Michelle's braids and arranged her recalcitrant curls about her head, pinning flowers in them.

Other books

Scaredy Cat by Mark Billingham
A Few Green Leaves by Barbara Pym
Caramel Kisses by TJ Michaels
The Smartest Girl in the Room by Deborah Nam-Krane