Your Wish Is My Command (12 page)

Read Your Wish Is My Command Online

Authors: Donna Kauffman

BOOK: Your Wish Is My Command
6.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“You don't sound overly concerned.”

“Believe me, I'm not.”

He stepped closer, and suddenly the laughter died and every muscle in her body tightened in supreme awareness. “You so wish to disbelieve I am what I say? Would it be so bad for your friends to find love?”

She shook her head, then swallowed hard when he lifted his hand to her hair.

He brushed the wisps of hair from her temple. “Perhaps it is because you fear what comes next.”

“N-next?”

“Your heart,” he said softly, his voice an even more potent caress than his fingertips. “You are the last of
the three, my mistress. When I succeed in this match, yours will be next.”

She swallowed hard. “Impossible.”

“One thing I have learned: Nothing is impossible.” “Who are you?” she whispered.

“I am the man who will bring you eternal happiness.”

Jamie had lost her mind. She knew it was true. Because right at that moment she wanted nothing more than to believe him. And worse, the man she wanted for all eternity—well, she couldn't even allow herself to think it. Insanity and beyond. “I don't know what to make of you, Sebastien Valentin.”

“You need make nothing of me, Jamie.”

Dear Lord, she loved it when he said her name. She wanted him to continue talking to her in that sexy whisper, continue touching her, continue—His chuckle brought her back to earth.

“I fear the heat up here is getting to you. You're flushed.”

She did flush then, but in mortification. She stepped away from his touch, from the hypnotic aura that seemed to emanate from him. “Speaking of which, I really want to get back to work. I don't get much time off.”

“How long have you been making these models?”

She wanted him to leave, to let her find her balance again. “Since I was a young girl.” He gave her a knowing look, and she laughed. “Okay, so perhaps I had one or two pirate-queen fantasies. I grew out of those, but my fascination with boats remained.”

“As I said before, an unusual diversion for a woman.”

“Not so odd, really. I grew up on the water. My father and I are both maritime-history buffs. My grandfather built models. He and my aunt and un
cle—Jack's parents—helped raise me until I was old enough to go off with my dad. I used to spend hours watching Granddad in his workshop. I was fascinated watching the ships come to life. He knew all the stories for each of them.”

“And your
maman?

“She loved the water too. That's how she met my dad. But she died when I was only two.” She smiled fondly. “My dad was a great parent to me, though. We traveled all over the world, just him and me. He was an offshore racer. Later on I got into racing too.”

Sebastien's face lit up in surprise. “You raced ships?”

“Why do you sound so surprised? It may be a predominantly male sport, but I did okay.”

“You sail, then?”

“Actually, no. I mean, I love the history of the high seas and all kinds of ships built over the years. Especially the tall ships. But for racing, sailboats aren't my thing.” “Your … thing?”

“Too slow.” She waggled her eyebrows. “I have a need for speed.”

Sebastien looked taken aback for a moment, then he tipped his head back and laughed. It was such a deep, resonant sound that Jamie felt the rush of it across every inch of her skin.

He grinned at her. “Speed?”

“I like the salt in the air and the wind in my face. But I want to fly over the water. I raced hydroplanes. Unlimited class. Up to two hundred miles per hour.”

His eyes widened. “I am unfamiliar with that type of vessel. Do you have one still?”

A little of the reminiscent thrill dissipated. “My father has it stored. I don't race anymore.”

“Ah, yes, you sell books now. Quite a change.” His
expression turned contemplative. “Do you miss the water, Jamie? It calls to me still. Very strongly.”

His quiet words brought her right back to that edge of awareness. She wasn't sure if she liked the common ground they seemed to have found. It screamed danger at her. Maybe because she found she liked that bond all too much. And hadn't she come back to New Orleans expressly to get away from men and their fascination with boats? “I don't miss the racing circuit,” she answered honestly. “But I do miss the flying.”

Sebastien's eyes lit up. He grabbed her hand. “Then let's go.”

Jamie pulled back. “Whoa, whoa! What are you doing?”

“Do you have to work again today?”

She shook her head. “Marta is overseeing a signing for Bennett in the store this afternoon. We're having a bunch of kids in for a reading from his latest book. Jack is coming in to help Ree. Then we close early since it's Sunday. But I'd really hoped to get further with my model this afternoon. I won't have time off again for two weeks.”

He took her hand and kissed the back of her fingers. “You have spent enough time with replicas. You need to taste the air. We must feel the sea spray on our skin.”

“But—We?
Our
” Her protestations died as he whirled her around.

“You work hard, Jamie. But you are accustomed to playing hard as well, no? This I understand.” When she would have protested again, he pulled her closer. “Just because you no longer compete in this racing of yours does not mean you have to close yourself into an airless box of an attic.” He stopped her protest with a finger to her lips. “You say you miss it. This is true?”

She could only nod.

“I want you to teach me to fly,
mon amie
. I want to know more about this need for speed.” His eyes were shining with an excitement she'd never seen. She was helpless against it. And, in truth, she wouldn't have fought it anyway.

She wanted to fly again too.

Chapter 9

S
ebastien stepped thankfully onto the dock and away from the death machine Jamie called an automobile. The gentle swaying motion beneath his feet brought him immediate peace of mind. Here he was in control. Or at least confident of his survival.

“Are you okay? You look a bit pale.”

He shot her a look. “Let us just say that I am no longer in need of a demonstration of your need for speed.”

Jamie laughed and punched him playfully on the arm. “I'm surprised. Big bad pirate like you. I'd think you'd love a good road-hugging sports car.”

He looked back at the tiny red demon he had barely folded himself into. He had to admit, the power of such a conveyance intrigued him. “Perhaps if I were manning one, that would be different.”

“You should have said something. I'd have let you rive.

Sebastien felt the heat rise toward his face. He was unaccustomed to being made to feel less than in command. Especially by a woman. But he was rapidly learning that Jamie was not a typical woman. “I have no license.”

Jamie nudged him as they walked down the uneven planking. “I won't tell if you won't.”

He shot her a dark look, then sighed.

“What, you're going to tell me that a man who flaunted the laws of the sea holds to the laws of the road?”

“No,” he said through clenched teeth. “I'm telling you I have never mastered driving such a vehicle.”

Jamie stopped dead, holding on to his arm so he stopped too. “You can't drive?”

Sebastien felt his muscles twitch. “No. It hasn't exactly been a necessary tool for me.”

Instead of teasing him further, a sudden look of uncertainty crossed her face. He immediately felt better with her off balance. Perhaps it would be wise of him to keep her that way.

“My last few times in the city I rode the streetcar everywhere I needed to go. At that time the rails covered more of the city. Prior to that, I rode horseback. Now there are taxis.” Jamie said nothing. He continued toward the small boathouse at the end of the dock, her long legs easily keeping pace beside his. She was as at home on the swaying planks as he was. If he allowed himself, he could almost feel a certain kinship with her. That wasn't such a bad thing, he tried to convince himself. Knowing her better could only help him in his mission.

And yet he fought those feelings. They signaled a danger to him he couldn't comprehend, but he adhered to them all the same. His instincts were good, and he'd long ago learned to trust them without question.

She began to explain the type of boat they were going to be taking out that day, a twin inboard something or other. He wasn't paying the closest attention. He was too busy studying her, trying to fathom from where his odd feelings were originating.

Her hair was in its usual thick plait, swinging to
fro across her back like a pendulum. Light wisps blew freely about her face. He wanted to reach out and smooth them back.

Odd, this wanting of his to touch her. Surely it could be explained away—it merely irritated him to have his view of her face and expressions obstructed. And he wished to view her unobscured face only so he could divine her inward thoughts. Aiding him in the process of eventually finding her soulmate.

It wasn't as though she was a raving beauty. Her skin, for one, was tanned by the sun's rays. There were fine lines fanning from the corners of her eyes when she smiled, similar to those on his own face. He knew she'd earned those lines just as he had, from years spent on the water, beneath the sun. They weren't feminine and certainly couldn't be considered flattering. They shouldn't have drawn his attention in a fond way. And yet they did.

Then there were her cheekbones and jawline, both lean and far more angular than he usually enjoyed in a woman. Her shoulders were broad, her arms somewhat muscled. Definitely not alluring. She didn't look as if she'd ever leaned upon a man for assistance in her life. And he liked to be turned to, needed. She was narrow of waist, but with no breasts to break the clean line of her body and lend it the soft curves needed to redeem her otherwise mannish physique. No, there was nothing about Mademoiselle Jamie Sullivan that called to him as a man. He was—could only be—interested in her as another mission to be accomplished.

So why his gait was presently being hampered by a persistent ache in his groin was beyond him altogether.

She had him wait outside the boathouse and emerged moments later with a small set of keys. “Off we go!” She motioned to what appeared to him to be a
white raft tethered to the dock on a neighboring pier.

“In that? It's no more than a dinghy.”

She grinned. “A dinghy with two big beautiful Mercurys mounted underneath. It's not a hydro, but this baby will fly us fast enough. Come on.” She grabbed his hand and tugged him toward the boat. He admitted that the line of the boat was sleek, the prow narrow and proudly lifted. He motioned for her to step down. She jumped and landed lightly before turning and steadying the boat for him.

He untied the boat from the dock and followed her lead, landing just next to her. “Feels sound enough,” he said, liking the balanced way it rocked in the water. There was a single seat covered in a marine shade of blue behind the console, which boasted a small wheel next to a silver lever.

“It's fiberglass,” Jamie said, noticing his interest. “Don't worry, you'll like it fine once we're out on the water.” She moved to the console and started the engine. “Go ahead and pull in the line.”

Sebastien did so, which allowed him to conceal the shock he'd experienced at the powerful vibrations the engines had sent thrumming beneath his feet and throughout his body. He certainly was aware of the advances of technology—generally speaking—but in all his times back he'd never had reason or opportunity to go out on the water. And if he had, he'd likely have chosen a boat with sails. Something that would cut cleanly through the water and allow him to use the thrust of the wind to power his vessel.

But this … this powerful throbbing sensation of harnessed fury was nothing less than life-altering. And they weren't even moving yet.

He supposed it was quite possible that he could learn to enjoy this. Immensely.

“Hold on,” she shouted. She expertly maneuvered
the boat out of its slip and into the main waterway leading away from the many docks and boats. They barely left a wake behind them as they took a leisurely pace out toward the open waters of Lake Pontchar-train.

“We are hardly moving,” he said over the engine thrum and the light wind. “It seems like a great deal of work for such leisurely pace.”

She grinned at him, her brown eyes more vibrant and full of life than he could recall ever having seen them. “Just you wait.”

She looked back to the open water, but he found himself still staring at her profile. Her body might not have been the bountiful treasure he sought in a woman, but in that brief moment just now as their eyes connected, his body had leapt in response.

Absurd, he thought, turning to face the water once again. It was more likely the thrill of being out on the water again, combined with the new sensations the engines were providing, that had stirred his blood so.

They passed a small buoy and he all but felt Jamie's body tighten beside his. “Are you ready?” she shouted over the increasing wind.

He could only nod, but he tightened his grip on the console next to her, bracing his legs a bit farther apart.

“Hang on, baby! We're gonna fly!”

She pushed up on the silver handle next to the wheel, and the boat actually leapt forward in instant response. Sebastien let out a startled laugh at the amazing feeling it gave him, then leaned into the wind and let the sensation rush over him.

They went faster and faster, the boat barely skimming the surface of the water. Never in all his life had he felt anything so fantastical, so exhilarating.

Jamie let out a shout of glee and pushed the speed up even faster. “Hold on, we're going wake jumping.”
angled the boat sharply to the right, causing a surprised Sebastien to clutch on to her momentarily before quickly adapting to the new direction.

“Wake jumping?” he shouted.

She only nodded, her grin a permanent slash of white across her tanned face. There was no hair in her face now, allowing him an unhampered view of the unmitigated glee with which she attacked the water. And it was most certainly an attack, with this throbbing boat beneath her serving as both her war machine and her weapon.

Other books

First and Only by Dan Abnett
Power in the Blood by Michael Lister
The Farming of Bones by Edwidge Danticat
The Hundred Days by Patrick O'Brian
Going Nowhere by Galvin, K. M.
The Jackal of Nar by John Marco
Mine 'Til Monday by Ruby Laska
Rose of Hope by Mairi Norris