Montgomery - The Heiress - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
When she'd finished, Frances used the one dry towel to wipe imaginary droplets off her blue satin dress. "Perhaps we can intercept the reply to the letter."
Axia's head was now beginning to clear enough so she could understand what had happened. Because of this letter, her freedom could end much sooner than was originally planned. "It is not the reply that worries me, but the hundred or so armed men that my father will send with his reply." Again she tried to calm herself, as she'd never be able to think if she were this angry.
Standing in the tub, Axia took the towel from Frances, and while she dried herself, she tried to think. "You must disappear."
"Excuse my vanity, but do you not think someone will notice that I have gone? And really, Axia, I do not understand why I am the one to disappear. Your father will be angry at you, not at me. I am only the cousin."
"A cousin with no funds," Axia reminded her. "And besides, you are the one who caused all this with your talk of a secret marriage."
Frances gave her a stubborn look, and Axia knew that it would do no good to remind Frances that all of this was her fault. From experience she knew that Frances never seemed to remember that anything had ever been caused by her own errors.
Axia took a deep breath. "When did he send the letter?"
"I think this morning, I am not sure. Yes, yes, it had to be this morning, as he was out all night." Frances looked from Axia's uncrumpled bed to her. "Where were you last night?"
"With Tode," she answered, waving her hand in dismissal. "His legs. You cannot be here when my father sends his reply. He will-"
"Yes," Frances whispered in fear, "what will he do?"
"Throw you out and clap me in chains. Frances, why can't you think of these things first, before you get into these messes?"
"I wanted him to marry me. Is that so bad? He is an earl. An earl! Oh, Axia, you cannot imagine what it is like to never be safe. Every day I live with an ax hanging over my head. I do not know what will happen to me, what will-"
"And I do?!" Axia exploded, then forced herself to calm. A clean white linen nightgown was hanging over the back of a chair, and she put it on. With this news of Frances's, it didn't look as though she were going to get any sleep, but for a while she could be comfortable. "Let me think. I am tired."
Why hadn't she thought to warn Frances about this "engagement" of hers? Why hadn't she thought of what her father would do if he heard that his daughter was to marry someone not of his choosing? In reality, Jamie and Frances's marriage would be a union between a poor middle-cla.s.s woman and a poor aristocrat. It was their own business and no one else's. But the lie of the switched places and the involvement of Perkin Maidenhall made it all very serious.
Now, thinking of all this, Axia realized how stupid she had been. Why had she not thought of all the possible consequences of this switch with Frances? Why had she not thought of what would happen if her father became involved? For a moment fear ran through Axia. It was true that she'd never met her father, but she'd corresponded with him since she could write. But no matter what she did or how well she did it, there was never any hint of a visit from him.
As Axia well knew, Perkin Maidenhall was the overruling force in all their lives. Even if he wasn't a physical presence in their lives, the force of his personality always ruled them. And all her life, Axia had wanted to please her father. Maybe if she pleased him, he would visit her. Maybe he would say, "Well done."
The truth of the matter was that, for all that she liked flirting, liked these men asking her to marry them, she well knew that she'd only marry the man her father had chosen for her. No matter how horrible the man was, she would marry him. If she did not, what would her father do to her?
For all that she'd lived a life of great isolation, Axia was not naive in the ways of the world. Her father had not made his great wealth by being a kind and loving person. He was ruthless, and when someone did not give him what he wanted easily, he found other ways to get it. He had married her mother because he wanted a piece of land her father owned. No matter what he had to do to get what he wanted, in the end, he got it.
If her father received the letter from James Montgomery asking if he could marry his daughter Frances, what would be his reaction? Rage? For surely he'd figure out about the switch, and Perkin Maidenhall was not known for being kind to people who played him false. Would he decide it was his mission in life to bankrupt James Montgomery? Would he really throw Frances out without so much as a copper penny? Or would he marry her off to someone who made the devil look sweet tempered?
And, heaven help her, how would he punish his disobedient daughter?
"It is bad, is it not?" Frances whispered, watching Axia's face anxiously.
"I think we have gone too far," Axia answered, and Frances was so relieved at that "we" that she could have burst into tears.
"What do we do?"
"You must not be here when my father's men arrive. And we must get him out of here. Jamie must not receive the reply from my father. If we could make him think there was some danger and he had to move quickly -"
"He will not leave without you," Frances said grimly. "He will want to get you away from those men. All of them fawning all over you. As always, you made a spectacle of yourself."
At the thought of this morning, Axia smiled. "Two men proposing marriage in one day. Was it not divine?"
"Am I to say yes? From where I was sitting, it was disgusting. You are not considering marrying either of them, are you? That Rhys has nothing, and the other one breeds animals for children."
"You know that I am not to be given a choice for a husband," Axia snapped. "That is what this is all about! I am not free as you are. You can have any man who wants you, but I cannot. You are free to marry your earl if you can continue tricking him all the way to the altar."
Frances brightened at that thought. She would not tell Axia, but she was beginning to like this James Montgomery, not just because he was an earl, but because he was always so polite to her. It was a change from men clutching at her, wanting to touch her, for Frances did not much like being touched.
"Kidnapped!" Axia said brightly. "You shall be kidnapped."
Instantly, Frances said, "I do not like that idea."
"You should have thought of that before my father was informed of your marriage plans." Sitting on the edge of the bed, drying her hair with the damp towel, she looked at Frances. "I will get Tode to arrange a kidnapping. Yes, yes, this is right. I have told Jamie that I heard in the stables that they know you are the Maidenhall heiress, so it will seem natural that you are abducted."
"Is this true? Am I in danger?"
"Only from your own imagination," Axia snapped. "Yes, you will be kidnapped, in secret, of course, and Jamie will go after you."
"And you?" Frances asked archly. "While I am being bruised in a wagon, what will you be doing? Sitting in hot baths? Eating stuffed peac.o.c.k?"
"What does it matter to you if you are alone with your beloved James? I will..." She couldn't think what she would do, for surely the letter identifying Frances as the heiress would make her father send someone who could identify Axia as his daughter. Or would he send Jamie a written description? "My daughter is the ugly one," her father would write. "How could you have confused Frances with my plain, insignificant daughter?"
Now, Axia looked at Frances, and the early morning sunlight creeping in between the shutters in the room touched Frances's perfect cheek so it looked as though her skin were made from peaches. Her dress was bright blue satin trimmed in black, and Axia knew to the farthing how much it had cost. For herself, she never wore such gorgeous clothes, as it seemed that to adorn herself so was to put diamonds on a donkey. No matter how you dressed it up, it was still just a plain little donkey.
"I hate it when you look at me like that," Frances said. "You aren't planning something horrible for me, are you? You and that dreadful Tode?"
"Frances," she said patiently, "you got us into this. I had nothing to do with it, but as always, I will be the one who has to repair the damage." And bear the consequences, she thought, but she wasn't going to let Frances see her growing misery. "I will get Tode to take you away, then Jamie will follow you. He will tell everyone here that you were called away to home, but he will know the truth, and he will go flying out of here, his men behind him in pursuit of you. Therefore, when my father's men come they will-"
Frances looked at her cousin. "They will take you," she said softly.
Axia turned away so that Frances could not see her face. "It does not matter. It was only a few weeks of freedom that I was to have. And I have seen much and eaten much and met people who were not paid by my father. It is enough. It is more than I had expected." She would not allow herself to think about what was happening. "Here," she said as she fished inside a leather case and withdrew a little bag from inside the lining. "This is gold. Take it and go ready yourself. You must put what clothes you have back into the wagon, the unpainted one. Make some excuse, then stay in sight so Tode can find you."
"Will he be wearing that awful hood again? I hate it when he wears that."
"You hate his face; you hate his face to be covered. Whatever Tode does you hate. But yes, he will be in disguise, his face hidden. Go to him, and he will have arranged everything. It will be soon. Do you understand me, Frances, soon!"
"Axia, why do you always have to be so bad tempered?"
What had Axia expected? Grat.i.tude? From Frances? Suddenly, she couldn't bear the sight of her cousin. "Go!" she said, and when Frances did not move, she nearly yelled, "Go!"
With that, Frances scurried from the room, closing the door loudly behind her.
Axia started to get up, as she had much to do. But then it all hit her. Her tiny bit of freedom was over. Why had she not thought of what would happen if her father found out about the charade?
But she knew why. Freedom had gone to her head and forced out all rational thought. And then, too, there had been Jamie. Her fights with him, the-Oh, heavens, but her lovemaking with him.
Flopping back on the bed, she closed her eyes for a moment and remembered. That lovely night when she'd been in his arms. She'd told him she loved him, and he'd kissed her and held her. Had made love to her.
But now that was all over. When he heard that his precious Maidenhall heiress was missing, he'd be out of here in seconds, and he'd never look back at Axia. After all, he thought that Axia had no money, and money was what he most wanted in the world.
Axia wanted to cry, to indulge in feeling sorry for herself. But she had no time, as she needed to get up and tell Tode what must be done. But first she needed to see if his legs had recovered. She knew that he'd never stay in bed for more than one day, no matter how bad the pain. And the driver, she thought, she'd have to hire a driver. She'd have to do everything for her cousin because Frances was so dumb she'd wait inside the wagon until doomsday for someone to come fetch her.
I must get up, was her last thought before she fell asleep.
Chapter 15.
"What have you done with Frances?"
Axia was so hard asleep she couldn't at first understand what was being said or who was saying it. She was draped across the bed sideways, her feet hanging over the edge. When she opened her eyes in the dark room, she smiled. "Mmmm, Jamie," she murmured and closed her eyes again.
At a groan from him, she opened her eyes again. He was lying on the bed beside her, not touching her, his eyes closed and an arm thrown across his face.
"What is wrong?" she murmured and felt a surge of-of... Oh, dear, maybe it was just memory of that night they had been together. She so much wanted to kiss the skin of his neck, just above the soft velvet of his doublet.
"Why are you trying to kill me?" he asked, his voice deep within his throat, his eyes still hidden, not looking at her.
There had never been any s.e.x play in Axia's short life, but she knew when a man was angry with her and when he wasn't. And right now Jamie Montgomery was not angry at her.
Smiling, she rolled toward him and slipped the little dagger from its sheath at his side, then playfully held it to his throat. "Shall I do the job now? Take your life from you?"
Slowly, he moved his arm from across his eyes and looked at her with such a hot stare that her breath caught in her throat. "You do not know what you play at."
"I think I know more than you believe I do," she whispered, and for a moment she thought he was going to kiss her.
Abruptly, he sat up and glared at her. "I am not one of your pastries!"
"My what?" she said, smiling, leaning a bit toward him.
"Axia, I warn you, stop that. You do not know what you do. You may think you want to taste everything, see everything, that you want to touch all that is in the world, but you cannot-" He broke off and looked at her, covered only by her undergarment, the long linen s.h.i.+ft that went next to her skin. He knew that she had on nothing beneath that thin piece of linen. Nothing. Absolutely nothing.
"Axia," he said, and his voice was a moan.
"Yes, Jamie," she whispered, leaning toward him.
One minute he was sitting away from her, his mind firmly made up in resolve that he was not going to touch her, then the next second he had her on her back on the bed, his mouth on hers.
Even as he touched her, he wondered at the ferocity of his desire for her. This was Axia, the girl-woman who'd made his life h.e.l.l ever since he'd first seen her, yet he'd never felt such desire in his life.
His body was half on hers, his thigh pus.h.i.+ng hers apart as his mouth devoured hers. Perhaps he could have controlled himself if she had offered even the least resistance, but she opened to him like a flower to a bee. Her mouth opened under his, her legs opened, her arms clasped him to her.
His mouth, hot and searching, was on her neck, her cheeks, his hands clutched her breast, his thumb on her nipple, then his mouth descended lower, seeking her breast.
"Axia?" came a whisper from the doorway. "Axia, are you in here?"
"Just-" her voice broke as she tried to clear her brain and throat. "Just a minute." Looking up at Jamie hovering above her, he looked as dazed as she felt.
But only for a second. With a soldier's sense of urgency, Jamie sprang off the bed, threw back the covers, tossed Axia under them, then he slipped behind the screen that was in one corner of the room.
"Axia?" Tode said, silently stealing into the room, making sure no one in the brightly lit hall saw him. His face and body were covered by a coa.r.s.e robe, the hood of it cleverly made deeper on one side so it covered the mutilated half of his face.
"Mmmm?" she said, trying to pretend that she had been asleep.
"I apologize for waking you." His remorse for disturbing her sleep was in his voice, because he knew that she had been awake all night tending to him. "I think something is amiss. Your father-"
Axia started coughing so violently that his words were cut off. Whatever happened, she could not let Jamie, hiding behind the screen, hear the secrets that she and Tode shared. Nor could she give Tode a hint that there was someone else in her bedroom.
"Axia, are you all right?"
She flung back the covers. "I think we should discuss this privately."
"And where is more private than your bedchamber?" he asked archly. "Axia, what are you up to?"
"Nothing. Really nothing. Leave me that I may dress, and I'll come to you later."
Tode stood still and looked at her. "Something is wrong. You are upset about something."
"No, no, of course not." Nervously, she glanced at the screen to see if any of Jamie's long form could be seen.
Following her eyes, Tode walked toward the screen, but Axia leaped from the bed and ran behind it. "Let me dress, then we shall..." Now that she was behind the screen, she looked at Jamie sitting calmly on a little stool and grinning at her. His long legs were stretched from one side of the screen to the other, and the only place to stand was between them.
"All right, dress then," Tode said with annoyance in his voice, unable to figure out what was wrong with her. It wasn't as though he'd never seen her in her nightclothes before.
Jamie was looking at Axia as though to say, Yes, do. Please get dressed.
Reaching out, Axia put her hand over Jamie's eyes to let him know he was to close them, but he just pulled her hand away, kissed the palm of it, and grinned.
Narrowing her eyes, pursing her mouth, she gave him a look that would have been translated into a vulgar expletive-if she knew any. Then, with a nasty little grin on her face, she reached across Jamie and up to the corset that was hanging on the wall above his head. Unfortunately, or fortunately, depending on the viewer, her b.r.e.a.s.t.s were momentarily pressed firmly and fully into his face.
When she had the corset in her hand, the smug expression was gone from his face. Now he looked like a man in pain.
"Where is Frances?" Tode asked from the other side of the screen, having no idea what was happening behind it.
"How in the world should I know where Frances is? Did you look inside the largest cl.u.s.ter of men you could find?"
Axia slipped the corset about her middle, then turned and motioned to Jamie that he was to fasten it for her. To her great delight, his hands were shaking.
"Axia," Tode said, "do not toy with me. What have you done with her?"
"Me? Why do you suspect me?"
"I heard what happened this morning. What made you agree to marry that man? Do you know that he is telling everyone that you are to be married?"
"Ow!" Axia yelped as Jamie pinched the back of her with a corset latch. "No, I did not know that, but I rather like it," she said over her shoulder to Jamie. Turning, she started to reach for her dress, a long, seamless gown, perfectly fitted to her body, a dark gold color, trimmed in narrow black velvet ribbon. There was nearly a yard of lacing down the back to secure the dress.