Duke of Blendingham. Both Thomas
Sexton, the contrived character he’d
used to his benefit as a member of
Nelson’s Tea, and Percival Avery, his
birthright, came from different societal
molds. Percy had been born into a
privileged life filled with gaiety, leisure,
and fashion. Thomas had been born out
of revenge, into murder and mayhem.
Percy would not harm a hair on the
fairer sex’s head. He would not be seen
cavorting with women of low virtue.
Thomas, on the other hand, enjoyed
plucking sensual women from his
travels, taking what sexual pleasure he
found when he wanted it or it was
presented to him.
Torn between two worlds, Percy
wondered if it was a crime to want the
defenseless woman before him. A
woman who crossed the boundaries he’d
erected around his heart. A woman
sporting the power to bind the two men
he’d become into one.
Percy was tired of fighting, tired of
battling images past and present. He
drew a ragged breath. Lifting the locket
dangling from Constance’s neck, he
opened it. Drops of water trickled out of
the trinket onto her skin. Fascinated, he
watched the rivulets stream across her
flesh. She shivered in response. He
examined her face and then focused on
the image within the locket of a woman
with similar features. Perplexed, he
closed the silver casing, then eased
Constance’s body under the coverlet and
rose from the bunk.
As captain, his men now assumed
Lady Constance was his.
H i s !
An
invigorating
thought.
Blonde,
courageous, the vixen had tried to defy
incalculable odds forced upon her. Her
wit, courage, and size were perfectly
suited to him. Frink was dead. All hope
of finding Celeste’s killer, gone. Yet,
neither of them was out of danger. For
this reason, and this reason alone, his
charade had to continue until they
reached port. He had to do everything in
his power to make sure his men believed
Constance belonged to him in every
way. It was the only way to keep her
safe, from his men — Frink’s men —
from himself
.
Still, Constance’s slumbering form
drew him like a moth to a flame. He
would return her to Simon in due course.
Once in home port, the
Striker
would be
handed over to the war office and
catalogued.
His
men
would
be
dispatched to their own vices and
Thomas
Sexton
would
fade
into
obscurity until called for by Nelson’s
Tea again. But none of the particulars
held meaning now. He was physically
exhausted after not having slept a good
night’s sleep in too long a time. There
was no need to keep watch. Frink was
dead. His men would see to it that he
wasn’t disturbed.
Percy scanned the cabin for a place
to sleep. Dissatisfied by the thought of
sleeping on the floor, he shrugged out of
his wet shirt and cast off his pants,
wincing as the wet fabric brushed
against the forgotten wound at his side.
Testing his bloody flesh, he returned to
the desk and rummaged through it until
he found some bandages. He poured
brandy on the wound, untwined the
gauze, and wrapped the fabric around
his abdomen. Wincing as he stood, he
glanced back at the bunk, and then to the
floor. He was in no condition or frame
of mind to sleep on the floor. He needed
a real bed, no matter that it was already
occupied. The fact that he’d have to
share it with Simon’s niece pricked his
conscience. But the opportunity to share
his body heat with someone who could
reciprocate, especially if that person
was a beautiful female, was irresistibly
appealing.
What would Lady Constance do if
she awoke and discovered him lying
naked beside her? She already thought
him a monster, a debaser of women. He
chuckled softly. As captain, he had
rights. Rights he was more than eager to
exact if his moral compass allowed him.
Constance shivered. He slipped
under the covers and pulled her against
him. She shifted, positioning her upper
leg over his. The intimate gesture ignited
his senses, filling his loins with
undeniable fire.
Sleep would elude him — again.
CHAPTER FOUR
Percy lay awake for four torturous hours,
ever mindful of the slightly shivering
form at his side, Lady Constance, the
untouchable female that helped him
understand the error in baiting a dog.
Except, he was the dog and she was the
tempting morsel.
He lay there in the stillness
agonizing over each breath she breathed,
feather-light, tickling hairs on his chest
where her head relaxed against his skin.
The seconds felt like hours as they
ticked slowly by. Every now and again,
her fingers would flex, grazing his
stomach, shooting sparks of pleasure
from the top of his head to the tips of his
toes. Still, he lay there, unwilling to
move should the leg, draped over his
lower regions, make him all the more
eager to sample her angelical flesh. He
was hungry. Hungry for what he could
not take. Hungry for what every ounce of
his being knew he could not have. He
was not used to waking up next to a
woman or, for that matter, sleeping with
a woman of rank. As a general rule, his
dalliances had been quick, impersonal.
Here, in his arms, however, lay the
conundrum. Constance made him face
the truth. He was a man with needs and
vengeance had denied him the one thing
a man should have at his side — a good
woman.
Under Simon Danbury’s service for
nearly ten years as a member of
Nelson’s Tea, Percy could not fault his
commander for the predicament he found
himself in. Simon was an excellent
leader, well-known, especially to those
who defied the law. Under his tutelage,
he’d become a force to be reckoned
with. Indeed, he owed Simon his utmost
allegiance. And he’d shown it. For
Simon’s sake, for Lady Constance’s
sake, he’d killed Frink, severing ties that
lead him to those responsible for
Celeste’s death. Though he’d been
chastised for pursuing Frink’s benefactor
for nearly a year, he’d also been given
the authority and leave to do so. Simon
backed his mission. He trusted Percy’s
instincts even though he did not approve
of the risks Percy took to find
absolution.
Now, in this bed, within his arms,
he held the one person Simon cherished
above all others. Though he wanted to
wake her, seduce her, make her his, to
do so meant destroying Constance’s
future and fracturing Simon’s trust. But,
he was just a man. A man who’d
followed men into hell. A man who’d
mutinied and jeopardized the lives of his
men for a blonde-haired angel. Didn’t he
deserve a reward?
Constance moaned against him.
Percy glanced down at her tussled mane
and touched her golden hair. The
filaments streamed across his chest and
entwined within his fingers, foreign as
silk, reminding him that he knew nothing
at all about the lithe woman in his arms,
but her name.
Who
was
Lady
Constance
Danbury? What led her to lie about her
name? What made her think pretending
to be Admiral Duncan’s daughter would
spare her life? And what had she been
doing on board the
Oct avi a
without
protection?
The stubborn woman couldn’t even
swim. In fact, she was afraid of the sea.
What had happened to justify her
presence on board ship? What would
drive any woman to face her worst fears
head on?
“Henry,” she mumbled.
Percy tuned in to her voice. Was
Henry her lover’s name — her
husband’s name? Lieutenant Henry
Guffald had been aboard the
Octavia
.
Was she calling out for him as a woman
would a lover? Percy thought more in
depth on the subject, which somehow
rankled him, though he had no idea why.
Guffald was a good man. The lieutenant
had certainly fought long and hard in the
Octavia
’s defense. But did Henry have
other reasons for protecting her? His old
friend had certainly never given him
cause to doubt his honorable intentions
before, but even the thought of Henry
protecting Constance displeased him. He
did not want to think of the vulnerable
woman in Henry’s arms, curled against
his body like she was now, or with any
other man, especially not in the throes of
passion.
Percy closed his eyes, realizing his
mistake too late. Images of Constance in
Henry’s arms tormented him with
abandon, sending an unruly amount of
energy surging throughout his limbs.
There was no mistaking the new
sensations stirred when the woman in
question shifted positions, making him
ache for what he dared not take.
Constance fit
him
to perfection. She
was a tempting creature and Percy
wanted to believe that her innocence
wasn’t a façade, that he had every right
to claim her as his own. If he wanted to
believe his men, he’d won that right by
saving her life, by casting aside his
purpose in finding his sister’s killers to
shield her from Frink’s demonic
amusement. She was in
h i s
cabin. She
was his to do with as
he
pleased. She
was part of
his
world now.
Reality
returned
and
logic
prevailed, even as Lady Constance
moved, draping her hair across his chest
when she turned her head. She moved
her hand across his abdomen to readjust
her position and rubbed her inner thigh
against
his
groin.
Percy’s
agony
amplified. Lustful thoughts burned a
fiery hole in his mind. Guilt accused him
of being a cad for becoming aroused by
an innocent.
Another feminine moan caressed
his ears.
Lady Constance was Simon’s
niece, God save him. It took every ounce
of his will to restrain himself from
turning Constance onto her back and
simply taking what he wanted —
needed
— now.
In a perfect world, she would be
married to a notable member of the ton,
preparing to offer her virginal buffet to
an eager, rutting husband. But this was
his
world and it was an imperfect place.
She was with
him
, not a mealy mouthed
lord. She was in a pirate’s bunk on a
pirate ship, not a dandy’s bed. Though
he was a member of the peerage and
could make her a good husband, he
would never surrender his identity, cut
off his ability to chase after something
no woman would ever understand or
allow. God’s truth, he’d even hidden his
activities from his own father.
When he’d joined Nelson’s Tea,
he’d been sworn to secrecy, sworn to
uphold the King’s edict. Serve when
called, no matter the mission or the lives
left behind. The men of Nelson’s Tea
gave up the duties of first son in order to
weave their way into the underbelly of
the nation’s resistance so that Nelson’s
war would be successful at home and
abroad. No one, they’d been told, would
suspect first sons of accomplishing such
feats. No one would get in their way.
Percy had answered every call
Nelson had ever made and he’d done so
without question, until his sister’s
untimely death — until now.
“Henry,” Constance whimpered.
The fact that she called for Henry