Bared to the Viscount (The Rites of May Book 1) (17 page)

BOOK: Bared to the Viscount (The Rites of May Book 1)
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“Ah, Mary,” he groaned. He drew in a big breath, and in his broad chest it sounded like a furnace drawing in air. A string of soft profanities fell from his lips. His hands under her skirts, which had stilled, began to move again, stroking and exploring her more earnestly. His eyes closed in pleasure, his big body swaying.

She was having this effect on a second man within the span of a single day. Amazing she had this power.

His hips rocked against her hand, making his shaft slide along her palm. “That’s good, Mary. So good.”

The shape of his member was blunter, less elegant than John’s, but her blood began to heat nonetheless, and she felt herself grow wet between her legs.

She could do this.

It wouldn’t be difficult. Just let him have his way, get through it, be rid of her virginity. Break John’s spell over her.

And she might even build a life with Sam. A home. Have children of her own.

All she had to do was shut her eyes, focus on the sensations of his fingers slipping between her thighs. Let his strong arms lift her up against the schoolhouse wall.

And if a deep pulse of sorrow was rising up through her chest along with the pleasure—well, she could ignore that.

Sam stilled again, and one of his hands slipped from beneath her skirts to cover her fingers with his. “Have you done this before, Mary?” His breathing rasped.

“No. Yes. Some of it.”

“It’s a serious thing.”

“I know that.” Oh, Lord, why did he have to talk?

But he was examining her face in the shadows. “You’re a lovely girl, Mary Wilkins. And clever. Bright as a new penny.”

Not the most romantic of compliments, but she got so few, she couldn’t complain. “Thank you.”

“I wouldn’t want to do wrong by you, is what I’m saying. You make good things happen for the people around here. You’d make a good wife for a man.”

Was he…proposing? Or warning her?

How did such things work?

It didn’t matter. “Please, Sam. Just get on with it.”

He laughed then, low and deep and warm, and shook his head. “Not even a bit of poetry first?”

She responded by tugging his trousers down lower on his hips. “No poetry.”

“Sweet Jesus.” His kiss became ravenous then. His big hand stroked her cleft, readying her. His fingers skimmed her juices, then moved to his shaft to spread her arousal over his erection. He seemed more than willing to cooperate with her now.

Something very near to panic swamped her, but she pushed it away. She put her arms around his neck instead, her forearms resting on the big, bunched corded muscles of his shoulders. Her pounding blood dizzied her.

His hands went under her buttocks, lifting her. His mouth pressed hot against her ear. “Be mine, then, Mary Wilkins….”

Let it happen, let it happen....

It was going to happen....

And then, from out on Birchford Green, a woman screamed.

The yells of men erupted a moment after—from the sound of it, the fight she’d sensed brewing earlier had begun.

Sam eased her back to the ground again. “Damn,” he said. “That’s trouble.”

“Yes,” she said with a sigh.

And they both tugged their clothing quickly to rights and ran back to the Green to see what was happening.

 

 

 

Chapter Eleven

 

 

Amazing how strong and belligerent Donald Evans could be with sufficient whiskey in his veins.

John gripped him from behind, locking his arms around the man’s torso. Although he was both taller and broader than the drunkard, he could scarcely hold on as Donald kicked and punched and twisted, wriggly as a greased pig.

Mr. Bassett had bloodied Donald’s nose, and now did his own desperate wriggling just a few feet away, clamped tight in the burly arms of the village blacksmith.

The source of Bassett’s fury was obvious: one of Donald’s fists held Mrs. Trumbull’s skirts, and in his flailing, he’d hauled the poor woman around so violently she could scarcely keep her feet. She was shrieking loud enough to wake the dead—not to mention punching and kicking at Donald herself as best she could manage, with half her blows landing on John’s knees and shins instead.

“Leggo a’ her, ye damned lout!” Mr. Bassett shouted, clearly as drunk as his opponent.

“Why shou’d I, then?” Donald Evans hollered back. “It’s not like she’s yours, is she?”

Mr. Bassett squirmed furiously against his restraints. “She’s not
yours
!”

“Ha!” yelled Mrs. Trumbull, pausing in her screeches to give Mr. Bassett a bitter glare. “Fat lot you care, Joe!”

A ring of townspeople and his tenants formed to watch the scene—everyone from the local cobbler to the Lawton girls. Mrs. Evans, the drunkard’s wife, stood amongst them, sobbing helplessly at her husband’s misbehavior, her face wobbly and wet as a bowl of porridge.

The Reverend Thomas Wilkins was doing his level best to calm the men down, coming between the would-be combatants with one palm outstretched to each of them, saying sensible vicar-ish things like, “Come now, you should be friends. We are all peaceable people here!”

Donald Evans responded with a curse so vile, he’d be ashamed to show his face in church for months—assuming he remembered his words once he sobered up.

Now Mary came running into the ring of onlookers. Thank goodness. He’d wondered where she’d gone off to. She looked even more flushed than before, her hair more unruly. “For heaven’s sake!” she cried. “Lord Parkhurst! Make him let her go!”

And—
oh
. Sam Brickley came hurrying up behind her. Looking a good deal flushed and rumpled himself. Adjusting his clothing in none too subtle a fashion.

Damn it all
.

Jealousy slammed through John, hot and hard, and his muscles tightened to steel. Suddenly crushed, Donald Evans squealed in pain...and let go of Mrs. Trumbull’s skirts.

The pub owner stumbled forwards out of the drunkard’s reach, milling her arms for balance.

“Well done, Donald!” exclaimed Thomas Wilkins, looking greatly relieved to see the crisis lessening. “That was the Christian thing to do.”

John’s fists still clenched against Donald’s middle, making the man whimper. What in hell had Mary been doing with
Sam Brickley
? The farmer was a good fellow, to be sure—a hard worker, owned a good chunk of land, steadily prosperous. But Sam was no proper match for a woman like Mary.

Mary was...Mary was
his
.

She stepped closer, but to talk to the still-wriggling drunkard, not to him. “This is why you must not drink, Donald,” she said earnestly. “You’ve upset the whole party.”

Donald wriggled a moment or two more, then fell abashed under Mary’s kind, bright gaze, and stilled. “Sorry, ma’am,” he said in a more subdued voice.

Good Lord. She really was some sort of sylvan nymph: her very presence soothed savage beasts.

The blacksmith seemed to feel this was his cue to release the sexton, and Bassett—thank goodness—ignored Donald in favor of going to Mrs. Trumbull and trying to put his arms around her. Mrs. Trumbull, in her turn, gave a loud
harrumph
and walked haughtily away. Bassett followed quickly in her wake, spouting drunken but profuse apologies.

Mary was just inches away now, her full focus on the drunkard. With her handkerchief, she dabbed at Donald’s bloody nose as though she were tending one of her schoolchildren.

Her brother the vicar finally lowered his outstretched arms. “There, now,” he said. “Peace is restored. Lord Parkhurst, you can let Donald go now. He’s coming to his senses.”

“I am not so certain of that,” John replied.

But Mary looked up to meet his gaze, and he felt dazzled. “Please, Lord Parkhurst,” she said.

What could he do but comply?

He eased his grip from around Donald’s middle, and the drunkard lurched forward.

Mary stepped neatly out of his way, but the surrounding crowd of ladies was not quite so agile. Donald had apparently been depending on John’s strength to keep him upright, and now his legs buckled beneath him. He pivoted like a weathervane in a strong wind and pitched forward—straight onto Rosamund Lawton, who had nothing like Mary’s athletic reflexes.

The pretty girl merely shrieked and fell back against her sisters as Donald’s weight struck her full force—and shrieked louder as the man tried to regain his balance by clutching at her shoulders. His unsteady hands slipped on the silken fabric of her frock, and a moment later he was attempting to support himself by clamping his hands over her breasts.

Panicking, Rosamund batted at his head with both palms and let out a piercing scream.

“Oh, quit yapping!” slurred Donald. “You’re no better’n me!”

Thomas Wilkins, who had been so calm a moment before, turned scarlet and swelled with outrage. “Get your hands off of her!” he shouted.

Before anyone else could move, the vicar thrust his left hand between Rosamund and Donald, seizing the drunkard’s coat. Wilkins spun the man around with surprising force, wrenching him off the lady, and then, so fast and hard Donald had no chance to see it coming, slammed his right fist into Donald’s jaw.

The blow struck with an audible crunch, and Donald hit the ground like a dropped hammer.

So much for the vicar being a peaceable Christian.

At least where Rosamund Lawton was concerned.

Interesting
.

The drama over now, the crowd began to move. Women circled Rosamund and Mrs. Evans both, cooing words of comfort. A group of men carted the groaning drunkard off to the pump to sober him up under the stream of cold water. Two fiddlers, hoping to salvage some fun from the occasion, scraped out the opening bars of “Blowzabella, My Bouncing Doxy.”

The vicar, meanwhile, was busy jumping from foot to foot, cradling his fist.

And John needed to talk to Mary.

He took her by the hand and pulled her away from the crowd.

“What are you doing?” she hissed at him. “I have to help Thomas.”

“Your brother seems surprisingly capable of handling himself.”

She tugged backwards. “I don’t want to talk to you.”

“No? I suppose you’d rather be back behind the schoolhouse with Sam Brickley.”

Her eyes widened in outrage. “
That
is none of your concern.”

“Of course it’s my concern!”

“Oh—pardon me, Lord of the Manor.” Her voice held a bitterness he’d never heard in it before. “I’d forgotten your rank amongst us.”

“Mary! That isn’t what I meant.”

She tugged again. “Let me go.”

“For God’s sake—it’s my concern because I
care
about you, damn it all.” He had to make her listen. He had to make her see. “Do you truly want to end up married to that man?”

“Maybe I do.” Her eyes looked almost accusing. Why was she so angry with him?

His chest ached terribly. “Please don’t, Mary. Sam Brickley’s not worthy of you.”

“Now,
that
is the most snobbish thing you’ve ever said.”

“It’s not snobbish. I don’t think
I’m
worthy of you either.”

Some complicated emotion went over her face, but the moonlight made it hard to interpret.

He squeezed her hand tighter, drawing her with him down the lane that led behind the hillock of the church and towards the woods. Miraculously, she followed him this time without too much resistance.

When they were under cover of the pines, he turned her to face him. “Do you love Sam? Isn’t that the question you told me had to be asked in these matters? The only one that matters? Can you honestly tell me you love him?”

Even here in the dimmer light, he could see tears begin to sparkle in her eyes. “What difference does it make whether I love him or not?”

“All the difference in the world.”

She squeezed shut her eyes now. “Please. Please just let me go.”

“Come on, now,” he said, laying his hands on her shoulders and willing her to look at him again. “Where’s the Mary I know? What difference does it make whether you
love
him? Love is the only reason to choose a mate. You’re the one who taught me that.”

She shook her head fretfully. “I was wrong about it, then.”

What on earth was going on with her? How could she say such a thing? John’s heart was a cannon ball, jammed heavily between his ribs and his throat. But he had to get through to her, and he had to get through to her now, before she made some irrevocable mistake. Before he lost his chance with her. “No, you weren’t wrong. You’ve always been wiser than me. You’ve made me understand things, Mary, that I never fully understood before. You’ve made me want to be true to myself. To live life as it should be lived.”

Her expression tightened warily, and the tears he’d seen earlier in her eyes squeezed out from beneath her closed lids. “I’m glad for you, John. Truly I am.” Despite her words, her voice seemed choked with misery. Even in the moonlight, he could see that she’d gone a shade or two paler than usual. “I do think you’ve done the right thing. Made the right decision. Honestly, I do.”

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