Lord of Legends. Susan Krinard
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Название: Lord of Legends

Автор: Susan Krinard

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Современные любовные романы

Серия:

isbn: 9781472006691

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ overskirt flared over the bustle.

      “What is that?” he asked.

      “I beg your pardon?”

      “Is that where you keep your tail?”

      Another shock raced from the soles of her shoes to the very tips of her hair. “My … my tail?”

      “You do not have one?”

      Oh. This was so much worse than she had feared, even when her doubts had been greatest. “People do not have tails, Ash,” she said.

      “No,” Ash said, unaware of her inner turmoil. “Mine is gone, too.”

      Flight seemed the better part of valor until Mariah realized what she was seeing in Ash’s black, sparkling eyes. He was teasing her. Teasing her, for heaven’s sake.

      Relief eased the pressure within her chest. “It is a very good thing, too,” she said, “or you would look quite out of place in the world.”

      “The world.” He looked over her shoulder at the door leading to the antechamber. “Outside.”

      “Yes.” How long since he had seen anything but these whitewashed stone walls?

      “We shall go outside,” she said. “When you are ready.”

      “Now.”

      It was a command, not a request, not a plea. She better understood what she faced now; she must firmly remind him who held command, or he would never become manageable.

      “Not yet,” she said. “First you must learn to dress, converse …”

      And remember. That most of all.

      With a deep sigh that further revealed the complexity of his emotions, Ash took the shirt from her and shrugged into it, the handsomely formed muscles of his chest and shoulders rippling with the easy motion. He buttoned it without the slightest difficulty, letting the tail hang over his trousers. Mariah knew she must choose her battles, and asking him to tuck in his shirt was the very least of them.

      She had not remembered to bring braces, but that was a complication she didn’t need at the moment. Garters were also out of the question. But stockings, even if they would not stay in place, were a necessity. She presented them to Ash.

      “These go over your feet,” she said.

      He looked at his feet, then at the stockings. “I don’t like them.”

      Just like a child … in that particular way, at least. And it was much easier to view him so, she decided. “You will get used to them,” she said. “You must have worn them in the past.”

      “Never.”

      At least he understood the concepts of past and present, which could not be said of many lunatics. “It is not in the least difficult.” She sat in the chair and unlaced her boot. “I am taking off my shoe. This is my stocking.”

      Blushing would be ridiculous now, in light of all she had already witnessed. She lifted her skirts to her ankle and pointed. “Stocking,” she said.

      His unfortunate habit of staring at her would likely be very difficult to break, but in this case she could forgive it. She replaced her boot self-consciously and returned to stand before the cage. “Let me see you do it,” she encouraged.

      He took the stockings, sat down on the floor—doubtless dirtying his otherwise spotless trousers—and pulled the stockings over his long, very handsome feet.

       And now you find feet attractive. How gauche of you. How very …

      Ash stood—or rather leaped—to those very attractive feet, scowling. “I don’t like them,” he said in a lordly manner that would have brooked no argument had it come from Donnington. It would be so easy to forget that Ash was not the man he claimed had imprisoned him.

      Stop it, she told herself. She rose and resolutely picked up the shoes. “Shoes are next.”

      The difficulty of getting the shoes through the bars was daunting, but Mariah was determined to accomplish it, with or without Ash’s help. He, however, was equally determined to keep them out, and his strength was considerably greater.

      The third time he pushed them back, she lost her temper.

      “That is quite enough!” she snapped. “You will wear them, or I shall … I shall—”

      “Go!” he said, his shout all but rattling the bars. “Leave me!”

      A prince could not have spoken more decidedly. Or more arrogantly. Mariah spun for the door. She was almost out when the hiss of ripping cloth spun her around again.

      Ash was removing his shirt—except “removing” was far too fine a word for the damage he was inflicting on the perfectly fine linen. In a moment, it would be in shreds on the floor and she would have lost the battle entirely.

      “No!” she said, and returned to the cell. “No,” she said more softly. “No shoes.”

      He stopped, his hands clenched on the ragged edges of his shirt. “No shoes?”

      Not today, my friend. But soon. She picked up the shoes and tucked them under the chair. “You will wear the stockings.”

      His scowl didn’t waver, but she fancied she saw a hint of yielding in his eyes. “Yes,” he said.

      Mariah blew out her breath. “We shall do without the jacket today,” she said. “It is time to discuss what you remember of your previous life.”

      The endless night of his eyes threatened to swallow her. “Let me go,” he said.

      “Not today.”

      Deliberately he pressed his face to the bars. The welts appeared before her eyes. She gave a cry and rushed to push him back, her hands thrust through the bars to press the firm muscles of his shoulders.

      “Are you mad?” she cried. “You … you …”

      She found herself near tears and took control of her wayward emotions, withdrawing her hands before he could think to grab them.

      “I shall not be blackmailed,” she said, anger spilling out of her like poison. “I have seen what happens. You …”

      Heal yourself. As he’d healed her thumb. Now it was happening again. The marks were disappearing, gone in the space of a dozen short breaths.

      Ash was someone, something, even she could not define. Either she was beginning to lose her mind, or he was more than.

      Not even a moan of protest could make its way past the constriction in her throat. She gathered up the lantern and fled … ignominiously, thoughtlessly, and as swiftly as her feet would carry her. She had stumbled halfway down the stairs before she remembered to return and lock the door.

      Once it was done, she leaned against the heavy wood and sobbed for breath. She СКАЧАТЬ