Peering around the door, Frances noted two large windows and followed the sunshine to a tray, bearing the gnawed remnants of a cube of cheese and a heel of a crusty loaf, balanced precariously half on and half off the ottoman at the end of the bed. An old rocking chair stood in the corner between the two windows.
Frances pushed the door wider, stepped forward, and
gazed at the bed.
Torn between amused horror at the widespread
disorder and relief he was safe, Frances choked back an urge to giggle. He was
safe and unharmed, though without doubt he would have a prodigious headache
when he awoke. Now she ought to leave at once. He would not be pleased to find
her here. And she most certainly did not wish to be found sneaking into a
gentleman’s chambers. The impropriety of what she had done struck her quite
suddenly and made her catch her breath.
She stepped back and caught a spur in her skirt.
Off-balance, she toppled back against the door. The
solid wood banged shut with a noise like thunder, and she fell against it.
Oh Lord!
Petrified, Frances glanced at the bed. Streatham’s
wrist slid down, his lids lifted, and he gazed at the bed canopy above him.
Jack stared at the ceiling.
Frances did not dare move, hardly dared to breathe.
The slightest movement would draw his attention to her. She held her breath and
hoped he would drift off back to sleep.
He would be furious she had invaded his home, his
privacy, his grief.
How had she ever thought coming here had been a
sensible thing to do? Arriving alone at a gentleman’s house was the height of
folly. As she stared at him, her reasons suddenly seemed specious indeed. His
well-being was not her concern and never would be.
Her thigh muscles ached from holding her in such an
awkward position against the door. Skin prickling with unease, heart thundering
against her ribs, she waited. Oh, dear Lord, she was going to collapse to the
floor if he did not shut his eyes soon. Her thighs burned and trembled. She had
to breathe—
His hand flopped to the mattress, his head rolled
on the pillow, and his wide, vacant gaze slowly focused on her. “Why, Lady
Rathmere…”
Through the thunder of blood in her ears, his voice
reached her as if from a great distance.
His brows drew together. “What the blazes are you
doing here?”
Frances struggled upright and took a step away from
the door. “To, er…see you got home safely. After last night. You know. You were
drunk and probably don’t remember.” Frances shook out her skirts and tugged the
jacket of her riding habit into place without looking in his direction. Her
face burned and prickled as blood suffused her skin.
He groaned, then sank back against the pillows, a fingertip
pressed to each temple.
Clearly he had a monstrous headache. Her mouth
twitched. There was a God after all. If she simply opened the door and
retreated, he might not notice until too late.
Her hand closed on the door knob.
“Frances?”
She glanced over her shoulder and sucked in a
shocked breath. His hollowed cheeks, tangled hair, and shadowed eyes spoke of
sleepless nights, misery, and deprivation. With a huge effort, he pushed to his
feet and stood there swaying as if a huge wind roared through the room.
Her breath caught uncomfortably in her throat and
forced her to swallow. Her gaze skimmed over his brown skin, traced the strong
tendons of his throat, lingered on the spreading collarbones, and glimpsed the
strong muscled chest revealed by the crumpled shirt falling away from his
shoulder.
Frances coughed and looked away. She had visited
museums and galleries and marvelled at works of art depicting man in extremis,
but now, when the real thing stood before her, she did not know what to say or
do. Cold white marble was all very well, but gleaming brown skin was much more
shocking.
“What the devil are you doing here?” He hitched the
drooping shirt back onto his shoulder, swayed, and grasped the bed post to
prevent toppling onto the mattress. “Well?”
He scowled at her. No statue she had ever seen
looked as angry as he did at this moment. Frances blinked, cleared her throat,
and turned to the door once again.
His eyes narrowed. When he took a step toward her,
Frances bit back a wheeze of fright and wrenched the door open.
Reluctance by Jen Black available now from
http://museituppublishing.com or http://www.amazon.co.uk/Reluctance-ebook/dp/B007ROL46Q
2 comments:
Very atmospheric trailer Jen, the pictures are lovely and you give just enough away to make me want to read it - again!
The words probably changed a good deal since that early stage, Anita. Glad you liked the trailer. Kevin's music always seems to fit very well...
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