Read A Rebel Without a Rogue Online
Authors: Bliss Bennet
Tags: #historical romance; Regency romance; Irish Rebellion
A hand snaked behind his neck, guiding his head down to hers. But before she could lay lips against his, he pushed away, jerking himself upright.
“No. That is not what I want.”
“Not what you want?” He shook his head, but still she rose, following him, laying a caressing hand on his arm. “Is it not what every man, the high and the low, the moral and the profane, desires? A woman’s lips, teasing against his? A woman’s body, compliant and willing?”
“A compliance bought and paid for? I thank you, but such an offer holds little appeal.”
“Why, then, did you bring me here? And why do you tremble beneath my touch?”
“Because I imagine your lips tendered in affection, not in trade,” he cried, jerking his arm free of her hand. “Your body a gift, not payment for my money, or my secrets, or my willingness to believe your lies.”
Fianna stepped back, a sneer marring the perfect symmetry of her face. “Affection? You think me stupid enough to offer my person for free, and do it with affection, no less? When I have nothing else with which to bargain?”
Nothing else with which to bargain? Did she value her intelligence so little? Her strong will? Her dedication, even to whatever misguided cause in which O’Hamill had entangled her?
Perhaps her family never thought to praise such qualities. Never seen beyond the stunning beauty of her face. Never allowed her to imagine what a relationship between a man and a woman not based on barter or trade might be like. . .
This time, he was the one to move closer. “Has no man ever kissed you with affection, Fianna?”
“As if affection would make the experience dissimilar,” she scoffed.
But still he heard it, the minute tremor in her words, the slightest catch of breath in her throat.
And, for the first time, her eyes shied away from his.
Two quick steps took him to her. Cupping her head between broad palms, he lifted her green gaze back where it belonged. Staring, haughty and intent, directly at him.
“Just let me,” he whispered, then lowered his lips to hers.
Fianna had kept her body as quiet as possible as she parried Kit’s words, her poise a shield lest he strike inside her guard. But all the while she’d felt her pulse beating in strange, unfamiliar parts of her body—the base of her throat, the crooks of her elbows, the very tips of her fingers and toes. When he took her face in his hands, that pounding narrowed, converged, as if her heart had decided to emigrate from her breast to her lips. In some foolish, misguided notion, she closed her eyes, as if by blinding herself to the sight of his face lowering to hers, she might keep him from seeing how his touch made her very blood rise.
And still it was a shock when the edges of his mouth pressed against hers, soft and strong and so very, very warm. He didn’t thrust his way inside, rushing to find his own pleasure or to impose his will on her; instead, he took his time, bussing his way along the curve of her lower lip, tracing the arches of her upper, using the tip of his tongue like a brush, painting pleasure with tiny, delicate strokes.
And suddenly, it was not his tongue that was limning the seam of their lips, inching inside a mouth. It was hers. Not in sly enticement, as it had with every other man she’d kissed, but in shy, tentative exploration. An exploration he welcomed, moaning deep in his throat, his thumbs sweeping encouragement over the curves of her cheeks.
Fianna pulled away to catch her breath, her lips swollen, ripe. Merciful heaven, kissing Kit Pennington was like biting into the warmth of the first slice of soda bread, fresh from her mother’s oven; no, like catching the last drip of clover honey falling from the spoon. A feast of which she would never have her fill.
And then it was Kit who was doing the kissing, tipping her head with gentle hands to angle his lips over hers. The unfamiliar sweetness of his mouth birthed something fragile, almost like pain, deep inside her. At school, she’d never been one to find the gold ring or the coin in the loaf of All Hallows’ Eve’s
bairin breac
. No, her piece had always held the stick, foretelling a year full of disputes, or worse, the rag, for poverty and bad luck. She’d never deserved any better, had she, a rebel’s bastard, abandoned by her mother’s family, ignored by her father’s.
Who did Kit imagine her, then, that he should treat her with such attention, such care? Make her feel as if bands of gold circled every finger, as if caskets and chests overflowing with gold lay at her very feet?
And who was she, this wanton, needy, vulnerable creature, breathless and trembling with desire?
She stilled, her chest tightening. Damn him. Damn Kit Pennington for making her weak, for making her
want
.
Kit moved his lips away from hers, tracing more tender kisses up and down the line of her jaw. No. No more tenderness. Not from him. And by God, not from her.
With a gasp, Fianna pulled free of his grasp, then reached around his neck and yanked his lips back to hers. With a violent thrust of her tongue, she delved deep, hard into his mouth. She’d not cede control to anyone, especially not a mere stripling such as he.
No, he’d have no gentleness from her. Rough thrusts of her tongue, sharp nips of her teeth, a yank on his hair, that’s all Fianna Cameron had to give.
Her roughness, though, seemed to excite him as much as his tenderness had inflamed her. His hands clenched and unclenched against her shoulders, her upper arms; when she jerked down his neckcloth, then circled his Adam’s apple with a lascivious lick, his entire body shuddered. Yes, that was more like.
Lowering to her knees, Fianna grabbed his hands and pulled. He followed her down without resistance. But even kneeling on the floor, his larger frame still dwarfed hers. With a groan of frustration, she gave him a sharp push, putting him on his back, putting him in his place.
He made no protest, just lay silent, unmoving, his eyes glinting in the scant moonlight shafting in from the window. Calling her. Daring her.
No. She would not succumb to any foolish urge to rest her head against his broad chest, to burrow her body into his side and nestle within falsely protective arms. Instead, she pressed her palms flat to the floor, one beside each of his ears, looming above him, making it clear who was in charge. Then, with painstaking deliberation, she bent her elbows, lowering her face inch by tormenting inch, commanding his gaze, daring him to look away.
Her hair had come undone, and swung past her arms, cocooning them within a silent, silken cave. She whispered breath over his cheekbone, his chin, the side of his jaw rough with stubble, enticing wordless promises that skimmed, but never quite touched, his heated skin. No, he’d not gain the upper hand over her.
His gulping pants hot in her ear, she pulled away to see the effect of her taunting. Wide, glazed, his eyes burned against the flush staining his high cheekbones; his hands lay empty, clutching, palms up on the floor, knowing to touch would be to burn. Yes, good. Now he was the weak one, the one brought low by his own desire. Not her.
Why, then, could she not calm the pounding of her all-too-susceptible heart? Nor stop herself from bending lower, to touch her lips to his one last time?
“Heaven help me, but I want you,” Kit whispered before their mouths could meet. “But will the gifts you offer be worth the cost, my
leannán sídhe
?”
Fianna jerked away, pushing up from the floor, turning her back against the sting of his words. He thought her a
leannán sídhe
? A fae intent on stealing his life force for her own?
Like mother, like daughter
, Aunt McCracken’s whisper mocked.
Damn her hands for trembling. She schooled her voice to an evenness she was far from feeling. “What know you of the fairy folk, Christopher Pennington?”
She flinched as a finger traced the curve of her cheek, caught a loose curl behind her ear. “I know far more than you could ever imagine, Fianna Cameron,” Kit whispered over her shoulder. “If Cameron, or even Fianna, is really your name.”
Instead of taking her in his arms again, as a traitorous part of her prayed he would, he turned away, then rose and crossed the room. But instead of leaving altogether, he paused at the door, staring down at its knob. After long, silent moments, he spoke.
“I’ve heard that the fairy folk need a man’s true name in order to work their spells on him,” he said, his expression hidden in shadow. “You should know, then, that mine is not Christopher. It’s Christian. Christian Pennington.”
Fianna’s breath caught in her throat. How was she to take it, this simple sharing of a given name? As a warning? Or as a sign of misguided trust?
The door snicked shut behind him, leaving her questions unanswered.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Kit tossed and turned in his bed for hours, dreams of Fianna’s lush, demanding mouth broken by visions of his uncle splayed out in his bed, in a chair, on the floor, blood oozing from a blackened hole in his chest. How could he be so drawn to a woman he was almost certain intended his uncle harm? And what in the hell had compelled him to tell her his real name?
Kicking free from the twisted bed linens, he sat up and hung his head in his hands. Wounded pride, perhaps, had compelled him, piqued that she could kiss him so simply to serve her own purposes. Or because he’d wanted her to know him, to see
him
, Christian Harlow Pennington, when she pressed her lips to his. Not just some nameless, faceless cog in the wheels of her own machinations.
Damn him for a bloody fool.
The first rays of morning light glazed his window as Kit washed his face and pulled on clean clothing. Uncle Christopher had arranged another meeting between himself and Theo, for ten o’clock this morning. But Kit hardly felt in the mood to discuss his political ambitions with his eldest brother. No, he had questions for his uncle, questions the Colonel might prefer Theo not hear. Such as why an Irishwoman might be in search of a certain English army major. And what cause said major might have given her to want to do him harm.
There was another task Kit had to attend to first, though, before bearding his uncle in his rooms. Checking to make sure Fianna still slept, he moved into the drawing room and pulled the family copy of
Debrett’s
, which his father had placed in Kit’s care, down from a high shelf. Opening to the section on viscounts, he flipped until he reached the
P
s. With a lead pencil, he added a line to the Pennington entry. Frowning, he set the book on the dining table, where Fianna would be certain to see it. Pray God this trap, unlike the one she’d avoided yesterday, would snare its intended prey.
The mantel clock chimed eight as Kit made his way into his uncle’s rooms. Christopher Pennington sat not in bed, but in a chair by the window, pillows and blankets cushioning his legs. One of the invalid’s better days, then. Kit’s chest tightened at the task ahead of him. Could he truly be so disloyal as to question the honor of a member of his own family?
But the memory of Fianna’s face when he’d called her a
leannán sídhe
urged him forward. For the slow smile of triumph he’d expected when he’d uttered the words had been nowhere in evidence, only the blank, frozen stare of one caught out in a secret shame. How could he reconcile such unanticipated vulnerability with the heartlessness of a scheming assassin, one who would murder a man without cause?