The Devil's Love (16 page)

Read The Devil's Love Online

Authors: Julia London

Tags: #Romance

BOOK: The Devil's Love
7.65Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Michael’s brows lowered with his suspicions. “My circumstance?”

“I have no desire to interfere, but I would ask for some consideration in return

for my… discretion.”

“Of what circumstance do you speak?” he asked slowly.

Abbey sighed impatiently. “I supposed there is no delicate way to say it, is

there? Very well. I am trying very hard to say that I understand about you and

Lady Davenport, and I—”

“Lady Davenport,” he said acidly.

Abbey flinched. “Yes. Lady Davenport. I’m trying to tell you that I don’t—”

“Trying to tell me what? That as far as you are concerned, it is perfectly all right for me to have a circumstance with Lady Davenport?‘’ he half stated, half

asked.

Abbey was momentarily startled. “No, I was… well, on second thought, I suppose I

was,” she said thoughtfully.

“That’s what you suppose,” he echoed, his frown deepening.

“Yes!” she declared impatiently. She was being as charitable as she knew how,

and he actually seemed annoyed with her! The Devil of Darfield certainly had

audacity. He put his snifter down and stood slowly, drawing to his full height

of more than six feet, and started toward her, slowly and deliberately. The muscles in his jaw were working, a sign she intuitively knew was not a good one.

“Really, I think I am being quite reasonable!” she fairly shouted as panic filled her. “Your resentment of me is quite evident, and you have made it perfectly clear your affections may lie elsewhere! I have been told Lady Davenport is very beautiful, and I can hardly blame you!”

Michael continued his slow approach, moving like a cat preparing to catch its

prey. Abbey instinctively braced herself against the table, gripping it so hard

that her fingers ached. His cold, stone-gray eyes were impenetrable, and she

knew that she had hit a deep, dissonant chord.

She frantically attempted to explain again. “Really, Darfield, I do not know why

this angers you so! I am trying to convey that I quite understand your circumstance and will not stand in your way!”

Michael came to a halt just inches from her. She could feel his brute strength,

thinly restrained, emanating from beneath his expensive clothing. His breath

fanned lightly across her face, and Abbey could look no higher than his mouth,

which was drawn in a tight, grim line. She was, for once in her life, truly frightened, and could feel the quaking in her limbs and the pit of her stomach.

He suddenly grabbed her arms and gripped them tightly.

He jerked her to him and smiled sardonically when she gasped. “The only circumstance I shall have is with my wife, Abbey. Whatever is in that devious

little mind of yours, know this: If I ever suspect, even for a moment, that you

are cuckolding me, I will have your pretty little head on a platter. Do I make

myself clear?”

Abbey recoiled from his deadly tone. “I would never,” she whispered.

His grip tightened painfully; his eyes slipped to her mouth. “You are my wife,

Abbey, for better or worse, and I expect you to act the part.

She inhaled sharply and leaned backward in a vain attempt to escape him, forcing

herself to look into his inviolable eyes.

“You misunderstand me, sir,” she rasped. “This is obviously an unbearable situation for you, and I only wish to chart a course we can both abide in relative comfort,” she murmured helplessly.

The corner of his mouth lifted in a twisted grin. “I shall dictate a course that

makes it bearable, I assure you,” he muttered coarsely, then covered her mouth

with his.

Abbey struggled against him. Forcing her lips apart with his tongue, he plunged

deep inside her mouth. The sensual attack ignited a smoldering fire within her,

and against her will, forsaking every shred of dignity she had, she responded.

He released his painful grip on her arms and slid his hands behind her back,

caressing her spine and pulling her more closely to him. She instinctively arched against him and could not contain a small moan when he pressed his

swollen manhood against her belly. Michael’s kiss became more urgent then, and

she clutched his shoulders as her body responded to a desire that seemed to

batter uncontrollably for release.

He groaned and tightened his embrace, crushing her to him. His lips slid to her

lobe and he flicked his tongue in her ear. Suddenly adrift on a sea of consuming

desire, Abbey closed her eyes and dropped her head back. Michael pressed his

lips against the warm hollow of her throat, while one hand began to travel slowly up her side. When he cupped her breast, she almost came out of her skin.

Her eyes flew open and she pushed hard against his chest.

Michael growled. “You are my wife,” he insisted against her lips.

Trembling uncontrollably with a peculiar mixture of fear and desire, she panicked. She wrenched her head away from him and desperately pushed

against his

chest. “No! I can’t do this, I can’t!” She gasped.

Michael groaned, but released her and took a step back. Gasping for air, Abbey’s

gaze unthinkingly traveled his masculine frame, her eyes widening at the sight

of his manhood straining against the fabric of his trousers. She dragged her

gaze to his face; he wore an expression of pure lust.

She thought she would be ill.

“What’s wrong with you?” he demanded.

“I… this is rather inconvenient.”

“ Inconvenient?” he all but shouted.

With a trembling hand, Abbey brushed a strand of hair from her eye and searched

frantically for an excuse.

“I have my monthly flux,” she lied, blushing furiously. Michael blinked. He ran

a hand through his thick hair, then turned his back to her.

She stumbled away from the sideboard as Michael fell into a leather chair and

reached for his brandy. He shook his head violently, ran a hand through his hair

again. Snarling to himself, he tossed his head back to drain the snifter of brandy. Still reeling wildly from the heated kiss and the terrifying emotions that roiled within her, Abbey stared at him in silence.

“Perhaps you should retire.” The cool, steady aloofness had returned to his

voice. Abbey unsteadily wiped her mouth with the back of her hand.

“What about our arrangement?” she asked nervously.

“Good God, woman, to hell with your bloody arrangement! Go to bed!”

Abbey wanted nothing more than to do just that, to be gone from him. She had

tried to be magnanimous, had tried to indicate she knew he needed time, and now

he was acting as if she were the most distasteful thing he had ever encountered.

He was a scoundrel of the worst kind, and she suddenly wanted nothing more than

to get away from him. She began to move toward the door.

“Abbey.” His voice, cold as ice, sent a shiver through her. She stopped and

turned slowly to face him.

He ruthlessly studied her face for a long moment before speaking. “If I ever discover you are cuckolding me, I may very well kill you. Believe me.”

The mere suggestion was so vile, Abbey recoiled. “How dare you insinuate such a

thing?” She gasped.

“How dare /?” he asked, laughing cruelly. “You come into my home and give me

your blessing to have an adulterous affair and think I will not understand?

What

possible motive would you have for that, unless you think it gives you license

to seek your own lover?” he asked nastily.

Abbey’s gut lurched; she stumbled to one of the leather chairs and gripped the

back of it for support as she realized she could no more love another man than

she could take her own life.

“No, no…” She moaned at his misunderstanding. “I only wanted to give you time! I

know you need time to remember that you once cared for me!” she blurted.

Startled, Michael’s brows knit in confusion. “I beg your pardon?‘’

Abbey swallowed hard to keep tears from falling. “I thought you would want time

to end your liaison,” she rushed. “I know you had to wait a very long time, and

I am sorry for that, because I didn’t want to wait, either, but Papa said it wasn’t the right time, and I know things may happen beyond our control! If you

need time to end your liaison before you remember how you waited all those

years, then I would gladly give it to you!”

As if watching some fantastic play unfold, Michael leaned forward in his chair.

“I haven’t the slightest notion what you are talking about,” he said quietly.

Abbey took a deep breath. She must be babbling; she obviously was not making any

sense. “Even though you waited all those years, I can understand that you were

not ready for my arrival—‘’

“Waited all those years?” he asked incredulously, and looked at her as if she

spoke a foreign language.

A feeling of sick dread began to descend on her. She nodded slowly,

uncertainly.

“The years we have been promised. You were waiting for me, Papa said you—” The

dark look of pity that washed over Michael’s face told her everything. In that

one instance, with that one look, he told her that her papa had lied. He had

never waited for her. He had never loved her. He probably did not even remember

she existed! He had not come to see her in America because he had not known she

was there! He saw her realization, and his pitiful expression only deepened.

Abbey suddenly clutched her hands to her stomach and whirled away from him.

“Oh— oh my God! she stammered. ”Oh my God!“ In a single, defining moment, her

whole world, everything she had ever known or believed, came crashing in on her.

A wave of nausea rumbled over her and the room began to surge to the right.

Sickened, Abbey lurched for the door.

“Abbey!” Michael cried from behind her. She stumbled forward, away from him,

desperate to find the door and flee before he could see her crushing humiliation. He caught her from behind and dragged her up against his chest, his

arms tightly around her middle. Abbey sagged against him.

“I think I am going to be sick,” she managed to get out. He muttered an oath

under his breath and swept her into his arms.

“Please let me go!” she begged him, mortified he should see her engulfing shame

at having been so stupid. What a fool she had been! What a naive, hapless little

fool! He had told her the truth, but she had not heard it until this very minute. He had never loved her, he had not even liked her! Everything that had

happened to her since she had set foot in England tumbled roughly in her mind.

Michael had told her he married her because of her father’s will. He had begged

her to end it before they both suffered irreparable harm. Withers had told

her

he did not like her when she was a little girl. She had heard none of it.

With a

choking sob, she finally understood that all her life she had believed he loved

her and was waiting for her, and he had been sailing around the world not even

remembering her! The painful realization that her dreams had been nothing more

than a fantasy concocted by her father was surpassed only by the revolting

realization that her father had lied to her about everything.

Michael moved with incredible swiftness down the long corridor. Abbey buried her

face in the soft wool of his coat, desperately swallowing her nausea.

“How could he? He could he have done this?” She moaned, not realizing she had

voiced her thoughts aloud.

“I don’t know, sweetheart,” Michael responded tightly. She heard his boots strike the marble staircase and felt herself being propelled upward. She heard

Sarah cry out when he kicked open the door to her chamber and heard him mumble

something to Sarah when he gently lay her on the bed. Abbey instantly rolled

away from his probing eyes and buried her face in a pillow. She could feel him

standing there, staring down at her, and thought she would die of shame.

After

what seemed to her to be an eternity, he turned and left her bedside. She barely

heard the soft exchange of voices as the tears she had tried to hide now seeped

out of her uncontrollably.

Michael cursed long and colorfully as he slowly made his way back to his library. The physical longing he felt for her had not been diminished by the sudden and awful realization that she had been duped by her own father.

No, it

had actually intensified. For the first time, he saw in her eyes very painful evidence that she might not be a part of Carrington’s plot but a victim. She had

been a mere child when the agreement had been struck; at least he had known what

he was doing when he signed the blasted thing. But now they were two adults,

each caught in the grip of betrayal from beyond the grave. Each forced into an

untenable situation by their fathers.

He poured a brandy as a servant picked up the glass he had dropped when it

looked as if she would faint. He walked to one of the windows, pushed aside the

thick drapes, forced the window open, and took several deep breaths of the gray

night air. Against his will, he had enjoyed this most pleasurable evening.

He

had basked in the glow of Abbey’s natural beauty, feeling a vague longing every

time she smiled at him.

He had never known anyone like her, not really. She was so wildly unconventional, so worldly and innocent at the same time. And her natural and

unfettered response to his kiss had startled him, unleashing a passion he had

not known since he was a young man. He might very well have taken her there, on

the library table, had she not come up with the obvious lie about her monthly

Other books

Silent Running by Harlan Thompson
El sueño de Hipatia by José Calvo Poyato
Island Hospital by Elizabeth Houghton
Who Killed Jimbo Jameson? by Kerrie McNamara
Do Cool Sh*t by Miki Agrawal
Writing the Cozy Mystery by Cohen, Nancy J.
A Passion Rekindled by Nolan, Rontora
Virginia Henley by Seduced
Devil of the Highlands by Lynsay Sands