Rebel (21 page)

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Authors: Heather Graham

BOOK: Rebel
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Tia was still home on a holiday as well, and among them they kept Alaina busy exploring the house and grounds.

And Ian began to damn himself for his promise to Teddy. Logically, it was probably the most reasonable solution for the moment. He didn’t know how long he’d be required to stay in Washington; he’d most probably be sent back soon, and he would be sent to the far south
for more expeditions into the Everglades—which would put him closer to Alaina there.

As dusk came, Jarrett reminded him that he was due to leave in the morning. “It’s late; spend some time with your wife.”

He found Alaina playing with two-year-old Anthony along with Jen and Tia. Alaina didn’t see him as he arrived at the upstairs nursery where so many McKenzies had played before. She was laughing, rolling on the floor with Anthony and Jen, and he felt again the strange stirrings he had felt when he had first seen her fencing on the lawn. Her laughter was like music; her smile was captivating. The gold light in her eyes was purely seductive.

He cleared his throat. She jumped swiftly to her feet, almost as if she were alarmed by his presence. He arched a brow, reaching out a hand to her. “Come for a ride with me?”

“I was occupying the baby. Jen planned on packing a few things for her trip home.”

“I’m fine,” Jen said.

“And I’m here,” Tia added.

“Come ride,” Ian insisted.

“I’ll… just change,” Alaina said.

She did so quickly, joining him at the stables in a matter of minutes. He helped her mount, then leaped up on Pye. He kneed his horse quickly to a gallop, knowing that Alaina could follow easily—and perhaps pass him if she chose.

He showed her the way the McKenzies had divided their property, so much land given over to cattle and livestock, so much given over to the growing of cotton, and a few acres where they were now growing sugar cane. He loved Cimarron: the house, the land, the look of it, the feel of it, the life that was lived there. Though he didn’t betray his emotions, he remained angry about her statements on the night of their marriage—that she hated Cimarron and detested his room.

But as dusk began to turn to dark, the wildness of their ride seemed to put her more at ease with him. She was flushed and happy, and complimentary of all that she saw. Watching her, Ian realized that she was glad to be out; Alaina loved to ride. She loved the wind, she
loved to run, to feel the earth. He already knew she loved to swim. When she caught him staring at her, her coloring deepened.

“You’re glad to be out?” he asked.

“I … I must admit…” she shrugged. She looked every inch the young lady in an emerald-green riding habit that perfectly highlighted her coloring. Her golden hair was swept up, delicate tendrils just escaping the blond coils beneath her plumed hat. “I admit that growing up far from civilization makes life quite different. Your family has been very kind. But I do usually ride every day. And the beach at sunset is always so enticing. … It’s fun to run on the sand and play tag with the tide.”

“You miss your home?”

“Everyone misses home—don’t they?” she asked him, and there was a soft wistful sound to her voice.

“When I’m away long enough, I miss it terribly,” Ian said.

“But that’s the way of the military, isn’t it? They send you where they need you?”

He nodded. “Luckily, I’ve been needed near home often enough lately.” He watched her as she sat her horse, so elegant in her perfectly tailored riding habit, the wistful expression still playing upon her perfect features. “Let’s head back, shall we?” he suggested.

Alaina nodded, and followed his lead when he turned Pye about to race across the fields. She was riding one of his mother’s Arabian mixes, a fast little filly named Sable. Alaina rode neck and neck with him, delighting in the rapid pace he set. She was smiling happily when they reached the stables. Her hair had come free from its neatly pinned sweep, however, and tumbled down her back in a riot of gold beneath her plumed hat.

He helped her from Sable, then said, “Wait here a minute.”

Ian left the stables and hurried to the house. He found his brother and Jerome intently involved in a game of chess. Julian informed him that both their parents and the rest of the family had left to have dinner with their nearest neighbor, Robert Trent, and his family.

“Do you need something?” Julian asked.

“Yes, I need both of you to stay out of the spring pool
for the next few hours,” Ian told them. “No jumping out from behind rocks.”

“Now, Ian, you know damned well we were accidentally caught there.”

“Yes, I do know. But I’d appreciate some privacy now.”

Jerome, staring at the chessboard, kept his head low and smiled. “I’m about to humiliate your brother by soundly thrashing him. Naturally, he’s going to feel compelled to challenge me again and again until he can win a game himself. We’ll do our best to see to it that you have absolute privacy.”

“Interesting, though, don’t you think?” Julian inquired, studying Jerome’s last move gravely. He glanced up at Ian then. “You spent your first day home by the pool in order to spend your last evening there as well.”

“Thank you, Julian, for your deep concern regarding my whereabouts. Jerome, thrash him slowly, will you?”

The two kept their attention upon the chessboard as Ian left them. He found Alaina standing outside the stables where he had left her, and slipped an arm about her waist. “Come on.”

“Where are we going?”

“You’ll see.”

When they reached the pool, she kept her distance from him, standing perfectly still as he sat upon the log to pull off his boots and socks.

“What are you doing?” she asked him uneasily.

“Going swimming. We can’t quite chase the tide here, but then, there’s no salt. Easier on the eyes.”

“You think—oh, you must be teasing, you wretch!” she exclaimed. “After all the trouble caused by this horrible pool—”

“The pool, my love, did not cause the trouble. People cause trouble. But since we’re already in such trouble, doesn’t it seem ridiculous to waste the pool?”

She shook her head. “Someone might come.”

“No one will come.”

“How do you know?”

“I’ve seen to it.”

“Oh! How reassuring! You’ve seen to it that people
know
you intend to…”

He arched a brow. “Go swimming?”

She spun around, certain he was making fun of her. He leaped off the log, coming swiftly behind her and sweeping her up into his arms.

“Ian—” she protested, hands against his chest.

“You miss the water; you said so. You can go in with your clothes on—or off.”

“Ian—”

“I warn you that this is my last night at my home, and I’ll not be denied.”

She trembled suddenly, a strange expression filtering through her eyes. “Clothes… off,” she whispered after a moment.

He arched a brow, but set her down, working upon the intricate little buttons of her bodice. She was very still, accepting his assistance, until all of her clothing lay pooled at her feet.

The sun was setting. Its beautiful colors, bursting out over the horizon, fell upon her naked length in a dazzling glow. The sensual perfection of her slim young body assailed his senses anew, and perhaps something predatory ignited within his eyes, for she suddenly took flight, running from him to dive into the pool.

She was an incredible swimmer. She disappeared into the depths while he shed the last of his own attire and came diving in after her. She was fast; it took all his effort to catch her, and she was supple and sure, evading his reach several times before he took firm hold of her at last, fingers threading into her hair, mouth forming firmly over hers as his kick jackknifed them to the surface. The bare brush of her thighs and breasts against his flesh was so keen it was almost unbearable; he groaned deep in his throat while his tongue hungrily savaged the honeyed sweetness of her mouth, and he damned himself a thousand times over for the promise he had made Teddy.

His lips parted from hers at last. His fingers moved down the length of her spine, palms molding over her buttocks to press her ever closer to his growing erection.

“I thought—I thought we came to swim.”

“We swam.”

“It’s your last night in your home,” she murmured.

“It is,” he said, but eased away a breath to determine
just where she was attempting to go with her conversation.

“Ian, we need to talk.”

“About?”

Treading water, she inhaled, then spoke quickly. “Ian, if you are going to be moving about, I truly beg your indulgence in this: Let me stay with my father. I’m all that he has. He needs me.”

He stared at her, glad that the setting sun, now crimson, was in her eyes and not his own. He remembered vaguely then that Teddy had said he wouldn’t tell Alaina that Ian had agreed she should return home. Ian was to have told her himself.

He’d never done so.

Interesting.

“Ah… you want to go with Teddy—because you don’t want to be left at so horrible a place as Cimarron?”

She flushed, but held her ground “I don’t hate Cimarron.”

“You don’t?” he demanded.

His gaze upon her was so demanding that she allowed her lashes to fall “I was angry when I said that. I don’t hate your home, and your parents are charming.”

“As you can be, when you want something,” he murmured He could see her temper stirring in the flash of her eyes, but she controlled it, and it was quite intriguing to watch the thought patterns race through her features. She hated the reality of it, but she had acquired a husband whom everyone seemed to consider had the right to dictate her future and whereabouts.

She lowered her eyes again. The water rippled cool around them in the pool.

“And you want this very badly,” he murmured dryly.

Her eyes flew up to his, flashing gold. “Teddy is all alone without me,” she said.

He gave her a sharp look. Teddy wasn’t all alone.

“All right, not exactly alone; he has his fieldworkers, of course, and we have the household servants, but… he needs me.”

Her hair was slicked back from her lovely face; her eyes were liquid gold. He studied the classic elegance of
her features and felt his gaze sweep lower then, fixing upon the rise of her breasts beneath the water. Her nipples were a soft rose, hardened now by the coolness of the water to fascinating little peaks.

“What if I needed you?” he asked huskily.

“You don’t need me. You don’t even particularly want me.”

His eyes flashed and it seemed that every inch of her skin from head to toe flushed crimson. “I definitely protest that statement,” he told her.

She shook her head impatiently. “You
wanted
another woman; you got me. Since so many marriages are arranged, as you’ve informed me, I imagine that you most probably consider me quite interchangeable with any young woman with whom you might have found yourself bound; Except that, of course, you’re Ian McKenzie, and nothing is usually arranged for you that you don’t want. In this case, your sense of duty dictated your desires.”

“Is that what you think?” he asked her, reaching out for her again, suddenly quite passionate. “Madam, you’re wrong. You’re not interchangeable in any way. And I’m not about to leave here worried sick about the affairs of state—and the affairs of my wife as well.”

She gasped, startled by his sudden vehemence. “Ian, you know that I—”

“Were you in love with O’Neill?”

“No!” she gasped. Then, “Yes!” She shook her head unhappily. “I—I had thought so, but he behaved so despicably. Ian, I swear to you, before God, whatever I felt for Peter died the minute his engagement was announced. I never intended to meet him.” She clutched his hand suddenly, pleading. “Ian, please, let me have this favor, and I will swear my loyalty on pain of death.” Anger suddenly burned in her eyes. “Besides, you’re going back to that woman you intended to marry. At the very least, you can let me stay with so innocent a man as my own father! Oh, this is so ridiculously unfair!”

“Indeed, but the way of the world, I’m afraid,” he reminded her pleasantly.

“Ian, please, don’t torment me now. Answer me.”

“Let you return to the untamed wilderness…”

“Your uncle has gone to Charleston, but Jerome will
be very close. And the Malloys, your cousin Jennifer, and her husband are next door to my home, and…” She paused, then added with a strange bitterness, “They are all my friends, but they are your blood, so I’m quite sure that if I were to so much as sneeze in the wrong direction, you’d know about it instantly.” “Your father is an honorable man.” “Then what is the difficulty?”

He smiled. “I might have intended for you to travel with me. I’ve a wife now, and I’ve so little to remember you by.”

She flushed again and murmured, “I’m in the pool, aren’t I?”

“It’s a start.”

She exhaled on a gasp of impatience and started to swim past him. He caught hold of her waist, drawing her to him, her back against his chest and hips, her head beneath his chin. “I don’t know what you want!” she whispered fervently. “We spent all of the nights—I never—I never once offered the least resistance—”

He laughed softly, intoxicated by her nearness again in the coolness of the pool, feeling the heat of her body against him. “If I remember rightly, there might have been just a hint of resistance there at first. But still… they were good nights.

I just want… more.”

“More?”

“Mmm. I want to go away feeling… secure. Feeling that my wife couldn’t possibly be swayed by an ex-lover—or any other man—since she is so enraptured by all that she has in me.” “Ian, you’re cruel”

“My love, I don’t mean to be. And you don’t sound enraptured.”

“But I am!” she protested “Really.” “Really.” He eased his hold upon her, turning her within the embrace of his arms. He caught her hand, powerful legs still knifing through the water to keep them afloat. He drew her palms and fingers down the length of his chest, bringing her fingers in a curl around the throbbing length of his erection. Her initial gasp— as if she had been handed something so loathsome as a
poisonous snake—was not exactly an “enraptured” sound. But she quickly recovered. Her gold eyes met his briefly, incredibly wide with amazement and surprise, then she buried her head against his shoulder, trembling, and her body pressed to his as she…

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