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Fires of Delight Page 6
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“Why are we sailing to the Caribbean?”
Was it the influence of the grape on her perception that made Selena think he looked startled by her question?
“I think it would be best if we absented ourselves from this part of America for a time. It is hardly safe for either of us, I’d say.”
“But, darling, but, darling—” Now what the deuce had she been planning to say? Oh, yes, it came to her “—but, darling, if Washington succeeds against Cornwallis at Yorktown, the war will be over. Don’t you want to be here for that? Don’t you want to enjoy the victory for which we’ve all struggled so long?”
“Of course I do.” He reached across the little table and took her hand. “Of course I do, but there are…but there are other things that require—Let’s talk about it later,” he concluded lightly. “I think you’re well on your way to sailing three sheets to the wind.”
“What? What? No, I’m not!” She started to stand, but suddenly the candlelight danced oddly, in leaping patterns of colors, like a bouquet of flowers, and—she was very, very sure—the room had begun to move like a slow carousel.
She sat down abruptly, giggling. “I’m purrfectly fine…”
The blanket had fallen loose around her shoulders. Why was Royce looking at her so sternly? It was certainly not the way he’d ever looked at her before. Usually the merest glimpse of her bare breasts made him…
“Where did you get that?” he was asking. She heard his voice, as if from far away, through the surfeit of food, the delicious languor of wine.
“What? Where did I get…oh, this cross!” The fate of Erasmus Ward sobered her a little, only for a moment, but long enough to tell him that Penrod had given her the little object.
“Isn’t it lovely?” she heard herself asking. “And do you know what he said, what Erasmus Ward said as he died? It was the strangest thing. ‘Sorbontay.’ What do you think of that?”
Royce Campbell’s dark eyes widened suddenly, as if the word meant something to him.
“Do you know what it means?” she asked, reaching for the almost-empty wine bottle.
“No, no, I don’t think I do,” she heard him say.
Selena’s hand missed its mark. The bottle tipped over onto the table. Red wine, like blood, pooled on the boards.
“Perhaps,” Royce said, “it’s time you had yourself a good sleep?”
“But I thought we could—”
“Later. First things first.”
She sat at the table watching as, with dreamlike slowness, at a great distance, Royce spread a bedroll out upon the floor. He came toward her then, step by step, lifted her from the chair into his arms, carried her back to the bedroll, and laid her gently down upon it. Her arms were around his neck and she clung to him.
“Royce, let’s. Please, darling. Now.”
He unclasped her hands from behind his neck and kissed her briefly, as one would kiss a child at bedtime.
“Later,” he said. “It will be much better when you’re rested.”
“Don’t go away! You won’t go away, will you?”
“Have no fear of that. I’ll be right here. I have to plan a few things for tomorrow and afterwards, but I’m coming to bed in a little while.”
“I’ll be here,” she murmured drowsily, feeling wine-dimmed and wonderful, her body already anticipating the pleasure to come.
He tucked blankets around her and kissed her on the mouth. “What will you do with the cross?” he asked, in a tone she could not just then decipher.
“I promised…I promised to wear it always…as a memory and keepsake.”
“Yes. The little guy was probably the bravest man I ever knew. Sleep now.”
“Ummmmmmm…”
Selena drifted so gently into wakefulness that for a while she was not even aware of being awake, nor of her surroundings. For a moment, she thought that she was still in her cell and immediately regretted that sleep had abandoned her to its squalor. But these blankets were soft and warm, and there had been no candlelight in her fortress prison. Then she turned, saw Royce seated at the table, and remembered that she was safe. “I love you,” she said.
He looked up, his face dark with concentration, and immediately blew out the flame, leaving the room in pale darkness. Selena had almost slept the night away. She could see, by the hint of light behind the drawn curtain, that it was almost dawn.
“Stay there,” he said. His voice was quiet, but in its tone was something almost like an order. She could make out the outline of his big body as he undressed and draped his clothing over the back of a chair. Then he picked something up from the table and put it in the cupboard. Selena had just begun to wonder what it was, but he came toward her then across the creaking floor of this hideaway, and all thoughts of mundane things spun away.
They had made love the first time in his hammock aboard the Highlander years ago, made love the last time in a hazel thicket on Long Island just before Oakley and his men had captured her and separated them, made love countless times in between in every way there was.
And now it was going to happen again.
Selena felt a tremendous rush of expectant desire as he slipped beside her in the bedroll and put his arms around her. His kiss tasted of wine for an instant, but then it was just and only his kiss. It was enough. She closed her eyes, gasping hungrily as he caressed her breasts, ran his hand down along her taut belly, teased the warm insides of her thighs with his fingertips, and touched her finally where she wanted most to be touched. Her hands sought the staff of him, long and hard and throbbing along its great length, softer there, thick and sleek and rounded at the end. A pearly drop of moisture, bespeaking his desire, seeped from him, and with her finger Selena spread it out like balm over the need-swollen tip, rubbing it in slowly, massaging him with slow, delicious motions as he moaned.
“God, but I love you,” he said. Her laugh of delight was husky, low. No man or woman on earth could possibly know the things they knew, or give pleasure so keen, or enjoy it so much. It was magic, all of it, when he came upon her, eased into her like coming home.
He was gentle at first, each approach, each questing stroke almost like an exploration. Their mouths were as ravenous for each other as their bodies were, and in the fire of their mutual need, the memory of pleasures they had shared in the past enhanced each sensation they felt now. Selena fitted herself beneath him, around him, until she became another part of Royce, moving with him, proudly feeling his urgency, a throb to the depths of her being. It seemed impossible that he could plunge so deep, but just when she thought she could not bear it anymore, he would begin to retreat. Then she held onto him as hard as she was able, crying out to have him deep again. His entire body trembled in her arms, and she drew her long, sweat-glistening legs up around him, locked her slim ankles behind his back—Royce riding higher, faster on her now—and her fading mind listened as she gasped and gasped again, felt her body, over which she had no control anymore, open and thrust, only to open and thrust and clutch and plunge again, maddened by pleasure and joy.
Selena felt the pressure building, but she no longer possessed enough of her conscious mind to hold onto reality. From far away, she felt her body moving, twisting, rearing faster and faster, and so too did the sweet body of her beloved by which she was mounted and ridden, by which she was melded by a magic greater than them both. He was moving into her now with strokes so powerful they made her cry out at each one, always wanting another and after that another, never wanting them to end.
In order to pleasure him more, she reached beneath him, teasing with swirling fingertips the heavy gourd of his nature. The feel of his leaping essence triggered her own release, and clinging to him, all of the world, all sensation, lived for an instant in an evanescent pinpoint of her body. He was her body then, and she his, in soul, in flesh.
Then, slowly, slowly in the afterglow of ecstasy, the pleasure spread throughout their bodies and into the very air, back into the wild universe from which it had c
ome and for which it had been created.
Royce slept.
It was dawn.
Selena lay beside her beloved for a long time, watching him sleep, pressing her cheek against his warm chest, listening to his heart beating. Life was, indeed, passing strange. Every person on the wide earth, every single person, had heart that beat, lips that kissed, tongue for sweet words or sweeter flesh, arms that embraced. But the body of one’s lover was ever a mystery, and even the best lovemaking no more than a feeble attempt to possess that body, to enter into it and know what it knew.
It must all be part of some vast plan, Selena mused, kissing Royce’s neck where the big vein beat, and we make love over and over, trying to know that which is unknowable.
A very good plan, she decided.
At length she arose, pulled a sheet around her, and walked to the window. Cautiously, she drew an edge of the curtain aside and peered out. This room was at the end of an alley, as she had surmised on the previous evening, but she was surprised to see how close the harbor was. She saw the Battery fortress, squat, ugly and ominous, and the Union Jack atop it, whipping in the breeze. If Washington were to be successful, God grant, in the forthcoming campaign against Cornwallis in Virginia, the Stars and Stripes would fly above that fortress soon. The moment had been a long time coming too. It was October of 1781; the war was over five years old.
Selena noted as well the many ships lying at anchor in the harbor, the freighters and the little gunboats and three monstrous British men-o’-war. She saw another ship too, which, by its position in the harbor, she knew to be the one she’d seen while clinging to the pier ladder last night. Neither warship nor freighter, it was low and sleek. A row of cannon gleamed along its main deck. She saw no flag atop its mast, but the one word Liberté, stood out along its gleaming hull.
French? That was impossible. It would have been the height of lunacy for a French captain to bring his vessel into New York harbor, which the British Navy dominated so thoroughly.
Maybe it was a captured French ship.
Still, the name of the vessel struck a chord, and she fingered the golden cross at her throat.
Then she washed, ate a piece of bread left over from the night before, and drank some water from the pitcher, wondering how soon Gilbertus Penrod would arrive. She would have to ask him to try and get a dress, a coat, and a good pair of shoes. Royce’s clothes—the British officer’s uniform—sagged across the back of a chair, his boots on the floor beneath the table. A good disguise for him if they meant to get out of New York unaccosted. She would need rather fine garments as a woman travelling with such a man. One thing you had to say for the British: They knew how to outfit an army in style.
Too bad for them that they did not know how to win wars.
Royce stirred, rolled over, sighed luxuriously, but went on sleeping. Selena smiled. What a glorious day this was!
Growing restless, however, she got up and walked around the room. It was small, but after her tiny cell, it seemed like the great hall of a palace. She traipsed about quietly, exulting in freedom. Then as she passed the little cupboard, she remembered that Royce had gone to it just before he’d joined her in the bedroll. Glancing over at him, she stooped and opened it. Another bottle of wine, some apples, and a rather woebegone blanket. She took an apple and bit into it greedily, noticing as she did so a small, dark bundle half-concealed by the blanket.
She reached in and took it out.
A pouch made of leather with a rawhide drawstring. Its contents were lumpy and hard.
Taking the apple and the pouch, she went back to the table, sat down, and undid the drawstring.
An observer, had there been one present, would have seen her eyes widen in astonishment, even alarm, would have noted how she seemed to gulp and stop chewing the bit of apple in her mouth.
Selena looked into the pouch and saw a cache of gold sovereigns along with emeralds, rubies, sapphires, and several diamonds of various sizes.
There was a fortune in the pouch!
More startling, the gems were cut and polished. It appeared that they had been deliberately and expertly removed from their settings in brooches or rings, bracelets or necklaces or earrings.
Why did Royce have these jewels?
Looking over at him now as he slept on, she could not help but remember what he’d been like when she’d first met him, and how he had cherished adventure on the high seas, enriching himself with the bounty of plundered ships.
But he was no longer like that at all.
Was he?
Mystified, distracted, and a little worried, she tightened the drawstring and returned the pouch to its hiding place.
“I’ll ask him about the gems when he awakens,” she said to herself.
No, she decided a moment later. He must have a good reason for being in possession of those things, and he must have had a good reason for placing them out of sight.
Who wouldn’t hide a fortune?
Besides which, the pouch was none of her business. Trust must exist between lovers, or their relationship is surely founded upon quicksand, or worse. He must have a good reason, she reassured herself. He’ll tell me about the pouch if it is something that concerns me.
Still, she was a little perturbed, and when Royce awoke a short time later, he asked her why she seemed so pensive.
“Just feeling lonely,” she fabricated, going to him, and when he took her again she forgot all about the bag of gold and jewels. Indeed, Royce gave her another fortune in gems, which danced in colored lights behind her closed eyelids, as with his body, strong from sleep, he sorcerered her dazzled flesh once again. Selena, still luxuriating in the ebb of previous pleasure, felt every sensation more keenly this time. With her fingers clinging to his shoulders, his back, with her head, her wild hair, whipping from side to side, she thought she could not bear it, and writhed as if trying to cast him off. But the thrashing, turning, twisting only increased the power and the splendor of delight, and when the glowing rush did come for both of them, when she squeezed him with her body as tightly as she could, he had to muffle her sobbing cries with a gentle hand.
“If Lieutenant Oakley has ears to hear”—Royce smiled after they had collapsed in glorified exhaustion next to each other—“he could hear you all the way to the fortress.”
“Oakley!” she pronounced, her loathing for the man reborn, and while Royce dressed she told him of the lieutenant’s strange nature, the balance between savage fanatacism and professed love of truth and beauty that existed within him. Royce was surprised to hear of the paintings, but suggested that talent often coexisted with mania.
“In Oakley’s case,” he said, “it may be that the dark side has the upper edge, perhaps due to his unfortunate visage. A person serene of soul looks out upon a world of color and light, and the world reflects back those same qualities. But if it is otherwise, the world may seem very black indeed.”
“All I know is that I am afraid the lieutenant will pursue me to the ends of the earth. He as much as said so. Something about beauty, beauty and truth, and there being a bond between us.”
“Then we shall break that bond,” vowed Royce, going to the window. “I wish Penrod would hurry, but it may be difficult to slip through the British.”
“If I’m captured,” said Selena in jest, recalling Royce’s words with the horseman on the pier, “you’ll doubtless have to share the reward money.”
“Not bloody likely,” he shot back, matching her tone, “you know I’d want it all for myself.”
His words brought back to mind the pouch of sovereigns and gems, and Selena fell suddenly silent.
Gilbertus Penrod, dressed in his fine business clothes of handmade linen, wearing a silk shirt and carrying a pearl-knobbed walking stick, entered the room worriedly just before noon. He also had with him a traveling bag of supple, expensive leather, and after greeting Royce and kissing Selena, he set the bag on the table.
“This will have to do, I’m afraid,” he said.
“There are redcoats on the streets of lower Manhattan today. I won’t be able to make the trip again without arousing unnecessary suspicion.”
Penrod opened the bag and began to remove a set of clothing. “Royce,” he continued, “I knew you had an officer’s uniform, so I decided it would be best to outfit Selena as your manservant.” He set upon the table a pair of knee-length breeches, black stockings, buckled shoes, white shirt, gray woolen jacket, and a black hat with a small crown and flat, circular brim.
Selena gazed doubtfully at the clothing—drab was rather the word for it—but Royce was pleased.
“Wise choice, Gil,” he said. “All officers have boys to serve as valets and wait on their personal needs. I don’t know if Selena will take kindly to being a boy, however.”
“I’ll do the best I can,” she promised, as the two men laughed.
“I also brought,” said Penrod, reaching into the bag again, “sustenance!”
He showed them a bottle of wine, a smaller container of brandy, a long, thick stick of hard salami, a metal can full of hardtack, and a jar of strawberry jam. “Best I could do,” he said.
“Splendid,” said Royce.
“What are your plans?” the other man asked.
“We’ll hole up here until dark, slip out, make our way to the west side, and hire a boat to take us up the Hudson. We’ll cross Westchester into Connecticut and then proceed to the Selena in Newport.”
“How does it feel to have a ship named for you?” Penrod asked Selena.
She pressed herself against Royce, smiling. “It depends on who’s done the naming. In this case I’ll accept the honor.”
He put his arm around her. “Gil, I’m a little low on funds…”
This statement surprised Selena as she knew about the sack of gems. She was almost certain now that something was going on about which she did not know and which she wasn’t at all sure she’d like.