Read Jo Goodman Online

Authors: My Reckless Heart

Jo Goodman (10 page)

BOOK: Jo Goodman
13.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

"The milk's in the cooler on the back—" She stopped because Decker was heading back to the pantry. He returned with a half-used bottle of whiskey that he had spied on his way to the cellar.

"Glasses?"

Jonna pointed to a cupboard to the left of the sink.

"Two, please."

Decker didn't comment, but took a second one from the cabinet. He carried them both to the table along with the whiskey and poured a good measure in each. Raising them, he eyed both carefully, and finally gave Jonna the one that he judged to hold a fraction less. "So why can't you sleep?" he asked. "Did you and Sheridan argue again?"

"Again?" She started to make a denial, then thought better of it. What did it matter if Decker knew about her earlier discussion with Grant? What did it matter if he knew about this one? "You heard him say he went to Faneuil Hall this evening. Garrison was speaking."

"An abolitionist meeting."

Jonna nodded.

"You don't approve."

"It's not that I disapprove exactly," she said. "I think it's dangerous. He was very excited when he came back here. He has some idea that he might be able to meet Falconer."

"Falconer?" He looked at Jonna blankly. Clearly she expected him to react. "I don't know the name."

"Then you're the only one in Boston who doesn't. Don't you read the papers, Captain Thorne?"

"I haven't recently."

"Falconer has been news long before you took to a sickbed."

"Then I overlooked that column," he said carelessly.

Jonna's snort clearly indicated it was much as she'd expected. She went on to explain. "Falconer is the name some freed slaves gave to their liberator. Garrison heard about it and published it in his paper."

"Then it's not the man's name."

Jonna's look was frank. "What makes you think their liberator is a man?" she asked. "She could be a woman."

"Point taken." He sipped his whiskey.

"It's probably a man," she conceded. "And I doubt Falconer is remotely close to his real name. That would be rather foolish, wouldn't it? It certainly wouldn't be the slaves intention to betray him."

Jonna had sat back in her chair and pulled her knees up to her chest. Her toes peeped out from under her dressing gown. They were indeed bare, Decker noticed. "Why does Grant want to meet him?" he asked.

"He has some idea that he can help Falconer. Money. A ship. Another connection to the Underground. Any of those reasons or all of them. Grant wants to act on a cause he believes in."

"Mr. Sheridan is a man of backbone, then. How lucky for you."

Jonna's violet eyes searched Decker's face for a trace of sarcasm. It was as absent from his cleanly carved features as from his tone. "Yes," she said at last. "Yes, to both."

Decker wondered that she didn't sound convinced. He recalled she had made a point earlier this evening of saying that Sheridan was not her fiancé. "You're worried about him," Decker said.

"I think I have reason to be."

Decker rubbed the side of his face where Sheridan had clipped him. "I think he's able to take care of himself."

"In a fight, perhaps. I'm talking about something that could get him hanged."

"Not here in Boston."

"But Grant goes aboard his ships from time to time. And he goes south. If he were to take on fugitive slaves..."

"I see." He hesitated, finished his drink, then plunged in. "Tell me something, Miss Remington. With so much to admire about the man, why haven't you agreed to marry Sheridan?"

Jonna didn't answer immediately. Until the words came out of her mouth, she didn't know what she would say. "Would you mind very much kissing me?"

 

 

 

Chapter 3

 

Studying her face, Decker said nothing. It was an earnest request, quite sincere, but he wondered how much she was already regretting it. "I wouldn't mind at all," he said finally, quietly.
But, is it a good idea?
That question was not given a voice. He leaned forward in his chair.

Jonna blinked. "No," she said.

Decker's expression indicated neither disappointment nor relief, both of which he felt in some measure. He stopped, paused, then pushed himself back again. "All right."

"No," she said, shaking her head. "You don't understand."

Decker didn't doubt it for a second. "You're probably right."

"Could you stand first?"

He considered that. Apparently she wanted to direct this kiss. He fought the urge to laugh out loud and pull her into his arms right then. How typically, refreshingly, Jonna Remington. "Very well," he said, coming to his feet. He added in what he hoped was a helpful tone, "But from this distance the best I can do is blow you a kiss."

A small vertical crease appeared between her feathered brows as she frowned up at him. "If you're not going to be serious..."

"Yes," he said. "Of course."

She continued to stare at him, searching his features for some hint that he was laughing at her. He merely looked expectant now. Jonna spoke before her courage faltered. "You need to come around here," she said, pointing to the edge of the table on her side.

Decker moved around the corner. Without any prompting from her this time he sat on the edge, his legs stretched out in front of him, his hands resting casually on either side of his hips.

She nodded, satisfied. "Yes, that's it."

"I thought it might be," he said dryly.

Jonna ignored that. "Would you take my wrist?"

He reached for her.

"Both of them," she said.

"You have to be specific."

"Both of them," she repeated.

He took a wrist in each hand. He knew what should happen now, but he waited for her instructions.

"Could you bring me to my feet?"

Decker didn't act immediately. "Is it just a gentle urging?" he asked. "Or should it be more commanding?"

"The latter," said Jonna. "Almost impulsive."

He nodded sagely. "Masterful, then." He pulled her to her feet in a single motion, and she came to rest quite naturally between his splayed legs. He continued to hold her wrists. Beneath his thumbs he felt her pulse racing, then acknowledged that it could be his own. Decker's head tilted slightly to one side as he continued to regard her with more detachment than he felt. "And now?" he asked.

"Now you should kiss me."

He began to lower his head.

Jonna's eyes closed in anticipation of the touch of his mouth. She waited, wondering how it might be different than with Grant, wondering if he would pull a response from her or find that she had very little to give.

Nothing happened.

She opened her eyes slowly and found herself staring directly into Decker's startlingly blue ones. "What is it?" she asked. She did not care at all for the breathlessness in her voice or for his brief, wry expression that said he noticed it.

"Well," he said, drawing out the single word. "I was wondering what sort of kiss it should be."

Jonna frowned. "What do you mean?"

"There
are
different kinds, you know."

"I'm sure I don't," she said primly.

"You don't?" Decker straightened now, putting some distance between them. Her face remained raised toward his, her violet eyes wide and unwavering, her mouth slightly parted. Her glossy black braid still lay over her shoulder. For a moment his attention was caught by it, caught by the curling end, the way it curved around her breast. "I thought this was an experiment of sorts. Was I mistaken?"

Jonna shook her head slowly.

"Then you must know the sort of kiss you want."

"Yes, but—"

Decker's voice was compelling. "Tell me."

Heat flushed Jonna's face. She started to pull away only to discover he was holding fast. The distance he had put between them disappeared again. It was when she opened her mouth to speak that his lips covered hers.

Decker had anticipated Jonna's startled, rigid reaction. His thighs tightened to keep her intimately in place, and he did not release her wrists. Her mouth was warm, the sweet taste of milk lingering on her lips. It was a taste he thought he might come to like, and he pressed the kiss more deeply.

He felt the first tentative stirrings of her response when she relaxed against him. His tongue traced the shape of her upper lip, then the ridge of her teeth. Her mouth opened wider, and he felt her breath catch. She leaned into him. He felt the outline of her breasts through their clothes. If she moved any closer she would feel the outline of his arousal. He didn't think she was prepared for that.

It was with more than a little reluctance that Decker broke off the kiss. "That would be one kind of kiss," he said. The steadiness of his voice was a wonder to him. "There are others."

Jonna opened her eyes slowly and found herself being studied with irritatingly frank regard. "That one will be quite sufficient," she said.

"I thought it might be. That's why I started there." He bent his head, but Jonna turned hers aside.

"I meant that one
was
quite sufficient," she told him. "There's no need for you to do it again."

He shrugged. "I don't mind."

"I do." She looked down at her side, where his hand still covered her wrist. "You can let me go now."

"I could."

Jonna's head snapped around. "It wasn't a suggestion."

Decker kept her right where she was. "You know, Miss Remington, you could get into a lot of trouble inviting men to kiss you. It's something you should think about before you offer yourself up the next time." He felt her stiffen at the rebuke, but she didn't offer a response. "Very well. Just so you understand there won't be any more experiments at my expense." Letting go of her wrists, Decker allowed her to step back. He crossed his legs at the ankle and folded his arms across his chest. His look was considering now. "Did you discover what you wanted to know?"

"Yes," she said quietly. "Yes, I did."

"And?"

"And the experiment wasn't about you at all, Captain Thorne. It was about me." She began to turn away. Softly, more to herself than to him, she added, "I don't suppose marriage will suit at all." Then she was gone.

* * *

Dr. Hardy visited his patient the following morning and pronounced Decker fit for duty. Although the doctor offered to inform Jonna himself, Decker wanted that pleasure. He had heard her leave for the harbor before it was light out, and he couldn't help but wonder if she had been to sleep at all. He hadn't. "But perhaps you might write something down," he told the physician. "She won't be entirely sure I'm telling the truth."

Hardy laughed. "Just so," he said. "You know her well."

Decker thought about her parting words last night. He didn't know her at all. "Well enough," he said to close the subject. He waited for the doctor to scribble down the order, and as soon as he was gone Decker began packing.

Jonna was seated behind her desk when Decker was announced by her secretary. She didn't get up to greet him. "The doctor's been to see you?" she asked.

"I'm sure you were an influence there. I was his first house call." Decker's eyes suddenly narrowed on Jonna's face. Her skin was pale, and there was a tightness about her mouth that spoke more of pain than disapproval. "Are you feeling well?" he asked. "Perhaps I should—"

She waved his concern aside. The gesture ended with her hand coming to rest on her lap, outside of the line of his vision. Her fingers knotted with the fingers of her other hand and she pressed hard enough to make her knuckles white. It kept her from thinking about the throbbing pain in her ankle. "I take it he thinks you're able to work."

"That's why I'm—" He stopped this time without any prompting from Jonna. Tossing his valise on a chair, he rounded her desk. At first he couldn't see what was wrong, but he didn't miss the white-knuckled fist. His eyes lifted to her face, then dropped again, this time following the raised line of her dress under the desk. The skirt of her gown and a full compliment of starched petticoats hid her legs from his view, but he could tell she had one limb propped on something. He hunkered down for a closer look. Without asking permission, he lifted the hem of her gown.

BOOK: Jo Goodman
13.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Housecarl by Griff Hosker
The New Male Sexuality by Bernie Zilbergeld
Echoes of the Dead by Sally Spencer
Craig Bellamy - GoodFella by Craig Bellamy
Keeping Dallas by Amber Kell
A Masterly Murder by Susanna Gregory
The End Game by Catherine Coulter