Read An Officer but No Gentleman Online

Authors: Bronwyn Scott

Tags: #ROMANCE - HISTORICAL

An Officer but No Gentleman (7 page)

BOOK: An Officer but No Gentleman
10.92Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

The crowd was thinning, the musicians tiring as he led her to the inn where the innkeeper was all too glad to have chamber set aside for the day’s champion and his wife. Elowyn collapsed on the bed, arms outstretched in weary happiness. “You were magnificent today! No wonder the Spanish riding school wants you.”

When he said nothing, she sat up and fixed him with a puzzled stare. “You’re still dressed. Aren’t you coming to bed?”

“I will, if you want me to.”

“Of course I want you to.”

Grahame cut her off gently. “I owe you my secret. That was our wager today.” He didn’t want to hurt her but she had to know. “I have to tell you who I am and you may not want me after that.” He shook his head to silence her protest. She had no business protesting what she didn’t know.

Elowyn sat up in bed, all seriousness. “All right, then tell me.”

Grahame began to pace. “I am a captain, but I didn’t buy my commission. Mine was a field promotion for valor and leadership during battle. That’s all true, but I’m not a gentleman born as you may have guessed. I have no title, not even a brother with a title. There’s no grandfatherly baron on my family tree, no pretensions to the gentry at all. I’m a kid from the slums who enlisted in the army as soon as he was able. I worked my way up from there.” He studied her, watching her take in the first salvo.

“You’re truly a self-made man, then. That’s more than admirable, Grahame,” Elowyn said with quiet fortitude.

“There’s more, Ell. Think about what that means. Being self-made means I work for a living. I will probably always have to work for a living. I can’t offer you the things you’re used to. Your father will see that right away. He will not find me suitable for any kind of association with you.”

She pleated the blanket between her fingers, thinking. “He doesn’t decide for me.”

“Then there’s more you need to know. I can’t have you making decisions without all the knowledge.” Grahame ran a hand through his hair. “I have to tell you the rest. After I returned to London, I needed work. A half-pay officer doesn’t have a salary that will keep him in London, so I started escorting rich women to their entertainments. They were grateful.”

“How grateful?” Elowyn had stopped pleating the blanket and fixed him with a hard stare.

“They would give me gems, necklaces, bracelets, expensive jewelry.” Lord, it was hard to say the words. It had never bothered him before, but he’d not cared for anyone’s opinion the way he cared for Elowyn’s.

“Did you have sex with them?”

“Some of them, yes. All right, a lot of them.” Grahame shook his head, trying to dispel the memories. “I was part of a group that called themselves the League of Discreet Gentlemen. We pleasured women who were unable to find pleasure in their own relationships.” He blew out a breath. “I know it sounds bad.” He waited. He waited for her ultimate rejection, her revulsion. Her green eyes were narrowed like a cat’s.

“Well, Grahame Westmore, that certainly explains a lot of things.” He could not tell by her tone how angry she was.

“What things?” Grahame ventured tentatively.

“Why you are so damn good in bed.” Elowyn rose off the bed and came to him. She circled him, her hand caressing him as she went, her hips swaying seductively. “As for being bad, I would have to disagree. I think there’s a bit of nobility in your calling. It is a great thing to give a woman pleasure. What it doesn’t explain, though, is how you ended up with my father’s commission.”

Grahame coughed uncomfortably. “A mix up of words, I imagine. Your father was looking for an escort, just of a different sort.” Channing had known that and exploited it.

Elowyn smiled. “Imagine that. Well, we don’t have to tell him.” She sobered, her hand pausing on his chest. “It also doesn’t explain us. I need to know, was I a game? Was I just another woman in need of your skills?”

Grahame covered her hand with his. Everything depended on these next simple words. “No. You were not,
are
not a game, which is why you had to know who I was, what I was. I could not bind you to a fiction of a man and have you discover too late what you’d chosen.”

“And what will I have chosen?” Elowyn’s eyes glinted in challenge. She was not going to let him go. He would treasure that later. Right now, he had to make her see the futility of her tenacity.

“Ell, I am a man of no background and no significant wealth. I work for a living. I will probably move several more times and you hate moving. I can give you none of what you crave. But God help me, I’m the man who wants to bed you tonight one last time before I deliver you to your father and say goodbye tomorrow.” If she would not let him go, he would have to stand firm and let her go, even if it killed him to do it. He would not be able to respect himself otherwise if he dragged her down to his level. But before that, he’d give them a night to remember.

Chapter Fourteen

It had been a week and Grahame Westmore had proven to be as good as his word, damn him. Elowyn looked out the front room window yet again. It had a view of the busy street and she’d found her eyes going to that view several times a day as if she expected to see Grahame striding up the front steps and declaring he’d made a mistake, that he’d been wrong when he’d decided there were more important things for her to have besides love.

She rather thought he’d overestimated those things and underestimated her. For that matter, he’d underestimated what he did have to offer. For starters, he wasn’t without resources. He
did
have an income. They’d have her dowry. They would hardly be paupers the way he made it sound. But there had been no convincing him of that. She’d hoped a week’s separation would have done the convincing for her. Perhaps that was why her eyes were ever drawn to the window these days.

The housekeeper bustled in. “Miss, will you want to go over the menus for the week?”

Elowyn turned her gaze from the window. She stared at the housekeeper, one thought demanding all her concentration. This was
not
control, the thing she valued so highly in her life. Deciding what to eat, which china to eat it off, who to invite to dinner, what dress to wear, none of it was really control. In the end, she moved when her father said move. She’d been deciding the small things all along, making temporary decisions. Even her relationships mirrored that pattern.

“Miss?” The housekeeper queried. Elowyn was sure she must look strange but she didn’t care. There was an important discussion going on in her head right now and if she deviated from listening to it for even a second, she would lose the thread. She loved Grahame Westmore. He loved her. If she really wanted to take control of something as significant as the direction of her life, she would not let his concern over society’s reaction stand in her way. Instead, she’d walk out this door and go straight to him.

Elowyn rose. “If you’ll excuse me. I have something I need to do. I’m going out.”

* * *

Grahame leaned against the stall door, exhausted and dirty. He’d just finished putting away the last horse of the day. The school was training a new group of horses for the king of Spain. There were grooms, of course, to do the menial work of grooming and stabling but Grahame had insisted he and the group of Spaniards working with him do it themselves as a way to build trust between horse and rider.

Maybe tonight he’d be tired enough to sleep, really sleep, without dreams. He only dreamed of one thing: Elowyn. He would wake hard and aching. Some nights he reached for her before he’d realize she was gone. His damnable respect was becoming a double-edged sword that was cutting only him. Perhaps he’d been wrong to let Elowyn go. It wasn’t that he didn’t value what they had. He knew how rare real happiness was and he’d meant it when he’d told her they’d found happiness for a short time. He’d seen too many unhappy women, women who’d come looking for him to provide them a type of happiness to know the difference. Maybe that was what scared him the most. What if he and Elowyn lost their happiness? It would be far worse to know what he’d lost then never to have had it at all.

A few men passed by the stall and stopped to invite him to go out with them. He smiled, thanked them and waved them on. He was not fit company for anyone tonight. By turning Elowyn free, he’d done the best he could for her. Right now, she was probably getting ready for a splendid night in a sparkling mansion near the Belvedere. In his mind’s eye he could see her putting on a silk gown, her maid putting up her hair. A loose curl would dangle in tantalizing temptation at her neck. Tonight, whether she meant to or not, she would dazzle some poor unsuspecting soul who had no idea what he was getting himself into. She couldn’t help it. He could almost hear that sultry voice of hers.

“Grahame Westmore, are you waiting for me?”

His imaginings must be getting stronger because that voice sounded very real. Only it wouldn’t be his name, of course. His name. Wait. Grahame turned slowly.

Elowyn stood there, just feet away, looking far too fresh for the stables, even pristine stables like this one. The horse in the stall gave him a hard nudge with its nose, pushing him forward as if even it knew Elowyn was his destiny.

“Hello, Ell.” Maybe not so fresh, now that he had time to study her. Her cheeks were flushed and she was out of breath. That only made his blood pound harder. “You’ve been running.”

“Yes, damn you, and it’s all your fault.” Her eyes sparkled and there was no malice behind her words. “I have something to say.” She put her hands on her hips, her face set in earnest. “I want you, Grahame Westmore, for better or for worse, for now and for always. I don’t care about the money, I don’t care about moving, I don’t care what anyone thinks. I’ve had a week to think it over and for the first time, I know my own mind.”

He couldn’t let her do this. Grahame opened his mouth to remind her of all the reasons they needed to exercise restraint but the words never came. Elowyn crossed the distance between them in two strides and sealed his mouth with a kiss. She had him up against the stable wall before he knew what was happening. His body knew, though. It had gone hard at the sight of her and her rough play was exciting it beyond measure now.

“You’ve spent too much time talking me out of this. Now it’s time for me to talk you into it,” She said between kisses, her hand slipping to his trousers.

“Ell, you know what I can offer you is not what you’re used to. You know the man I am.” He had to try but his words sounded weak, even to himself. All he wanted was to seat himself in her and be done with it, be done with all the worry, all the doubt.

“Yes, I do.” She stopped her kisses for a moment and met his eyes. “You are the man I love.”

There was no fighting that. There was no desire to fight that. If he was truly brave, he’d reach out and seize what she was offering him with both hands; it was his dream, his fantasy. He’d found someone to belong with if he would take it. Grahame dropped a kiss along her jaw. “Then I guess there’s only one question left. Elowyn Bagshaw, will you be my wife?”

Elowyn’s arms went around his neck. “I think the question is will you be my husband?” She laughed up at him but his answer was serious.

“There will be difficulties,” Grahame warned.

She gave him a soft smile. “Of course there will be. Sex is easy, Grahame. Love is hard.”

He pressed his hips against her, letting her feel his arousal. “Damn right it is.” Then he kissed her for all he was worth, which was substantially more than what he’d been worth a few weeks ago, not financially by any means, but by more important means. He was valued by this extraordinary woman and that was worth its weight in gold.

He held all he’d ever need in his arms and he was a happy man at last. He’d always believed some men were made for peace, others for war. Today he’d learned there are others who are made for love and he was one of them.

* * * * *

ABOUT
THE
AUTHOR

BRONWYN SCOTT
is a communications instructor at Pierce College in the United States, and is the proud mother of three wonderful children (one boy and two girls). When she’s not teaching or writing she enjoys playing the piano, traveling—especially to Florence, Italy—and studying history and foreign languages.

Readers can stay in touch on Bronwyn’s website,
www.bronwynnscott.com
, or at her blog,
www.bronwynswriting.blogspot.com
—she loves to hear from readers.

ISBN-13: 9781460326367

AN OFFICER BUT NO GENTLEMAN

Copyright © 2014 by Nikki Poppen

All rights reserved. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of publisher, Harlequin Enterprises Limited, 225 Duncan Mill Road, Don Mills, Ontario, Canada M3B 3K9.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental. This edition published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

® and ™ are trademarks of the publisher. Trademarks indicated with ® are registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office, the Canadian Trade Marks Office and in other countries.

www.Harlequin.com

BOOK: An Officer but No Gentleman
10.92Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Lion of the North by Kathryn le Veque
The Usurper by Rowena Cory Daniells
My Favorite Thief by Karyn Monk
Honour on Trial by Paul Schliesmann
A Wife by Christmas by Callie Hutton
Saratoga Sunrise by Christine Wenger