Betraying Mercy. Amber Lin

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seemed to send a shock through him. In a flash, he grasped her body between his legs, within his arms, bundling her up like a babe.

      His shudders rocked both of them, adrift in the sea of his grief. But neither of them were alone anymore. Tentatively, she stroked his back.

      Seconds stretched into minutes, maybe even hours, and he slowly stilled. She was exhausted, as if she had been the one to cry, even though she had not shed a tear. He shivered, and she ran her fingers over his neck, his shoulders.

      The air thickened with expectation. She understood what it meant: the member that hardened beneath her, the way his breathing turned harsh and heavy. His hold on her body turned from a greedy clutch to a firm hold of intention. Her body awoke with anticipation, while her mind muted the world with its protective cloak.

      He tangled his fingers in her hair, tugging her head back. His mouth met her neck in an open-mouthed kiss, then moved up behind her ear. She heard him breathe in the scent of her, as if he were suffocating and she were air. He settled her over his hardness, rocking gently.

      “I can’t stop,” he muttered.

      She made a decision, then, but it had never really been in question. He was her lord, her master, her everything. This was her fault, more than he could ever know. The use of her body, the loss of her maidenhead, was all the recompense she had to give. She proffered herself with a gentle nudge of her hips.

      He froze, taut muscle imprisoning her against his hardness. “No.”

      No? “You don’t want me?”

      “You’re innocent,” he said on a groan.

      Misplaced honor. She swallowed against the thickness. “I’m not.”

      He paused, his indecision swirling around their locked embrace.

      “It’s okay,” she whispered. “You need this.”

      He moved quickly, pushing up the thin fabric of her nightclothes and nudging her entrance with his thickness. It was too large, wouldn’t fit. The pressure burned, and she withheld a whimper, but his grip inexorably pulled her down. He impaled her, and she cried out.

      “Mercy?” he asked.

      Her hips raised and lowered, the motion instinctive. She knew the rhythm, and now her body learned its dance.

      “Yes,” he said. “Please.”

      She would have done it anyway, but to hear him beg spurred her on faster. Her movements were rewarded with a low moan. Always, she had been the one at a disadvantage. This time she set the pace. His hands rested on her hips, his head fell back.

      Dark memories nipped at her heels, but she grounded herself in the moment with his reactions. A curve of her hips had him gasping. A clenching of her muscles drew a groan out of him.

      She ruled him with every undulation of her body. He was the supplicant now, pleading from heavy-lidded eyes. A pinch of pain marked each invasion, but there was perverse pleasure, too. His needy sounds, his helpless shudders brought her a sort of internal satisfaction.

      His face contorted into a mask of fury: his eyes glinted, unseeing, his teeth bared. A low growl erupted from him as his body bowed upward. The force of his crisis tossed her body, but the weight of his hands anchored her.

      It was violent and desperate, in harmony with the rest of this night, but she could not be frightened. He had left himself vulnerable to her, and so tied a small string of trust between them. She had seen the weakest part of him, and his desire wasn’t it.

      He fell back onto the chair, wrapping her against his chest. His peace cocooned them both, a brief respite from the storm. Then he stood, pulling her up with him. She was drained, with no strength left to protest when he carried her across the room.

      He tucked her into bed, like a parent to a child, then he donned layer after layer of clothing, until his lanky limbs and slim torso were puffed up into the proper image of his lordship. Without a word, he left the room and shut the door behind him.

      The tiredness crashed over her in waves, until finally, sleep dragged her under.

      * * *

      The sound of voices woke Mercy—low pitched, male. One muttered incessantly, broken briefly by Rochford’s crisp accent and Owen’s familiar timbre.

      She opened her eyes. A dim glow through the window heralded the approach of dawn. The door swung open. She caught a glimpse of Rochford before she shut her eyes again.

      “Wake up, Mercy,” he said.

      He would have her leave his room, his house. Perhaps she would even have to leave the village, so as not to corrupt it. There were large problems to face, but as long as she huddled in the bed, she could put them off. Just for a moment, she wanted her life free from the whims of men.

      She said in a small voice, “I’m tired.”

      And she did feel tired, but more than that, she felt afraid.

      Owen came in, followed by the vicar. She gasped and stumbled from the bed, fussing futilely with the rumpled dress. It was one thing for Rochford or Owen to see her in such a state, with her hair falling around her shoulders and feet bare, but it was another thing entirely for a man of the cloth to witness her shame.

      Owen pulled the vicar over to stand between the chairs by the hearth. Rochford grabbed her hand and pulled her to stand beside him.

      “Begin,” Rochford said.

      The vicar simpered. “The banns.”

      Rochford made a sound suspiciously like a growl.

      “Marriage is a covenant of faith and discipline between a man and a woman…” the vicar intoned.

      “What?” she whispered, digging her fingernails into the hand that held hers. “Marriage?”

      His hand tightened back. “It’s the only thing to do,” he said. “You are ruined.”

      “You ruined me,” she whispered. “And you didn’t seem overly concerned about it at the time.”

      The vicar did not pause his recitation. “Today, before us and the eyes of God, they are declaring their eternal commitment, both on Earth and in the hereafter.”

      “Make her see reason,” Rochford said over her head to Owen.

      Owen shifted, not meeting her eyes. “Seems like the thing to do. After all…” He trailed off while his eyes flitted to the unmade bed where they had found her.

      “That makes me his mistress, not a wife.”

      “Why are you arguing?” Rochford whispered. “You’re going to be a countess.”

      Why was she arguing?

      She had not wanted her darkness to touch anyone else, but she had already joined with Rochford. She had not wanted to live beholden to a man’s fists, as her mother, but the life of a mistress was no better.

      All

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