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Delilah's Flame

Page 18

by Parnell, Andrea


  Seething, Lilah rose. “You are despicable, Tabor Stanton. I don’t know what this is about, but I won’t stay here and be insulted. You may tell your ladi—”

  “Excuse me,” Tabor interrupted, and left her standing mouth open as he crossed the room to answer a knock at the door.

  Lilah was relieved to see the person seeking entry was only a bellman delivering the dinner. She quickly turned her face away, deciding it was better if the young man could not identify her. She heard Tabor tell him they would serve themselves. The door clicked shut and Lilah whirled, ready to leave. She gasped softly as she saw Tabor standing guardlike in front of the door.

  Lilah marched to the brass coat rack and whipped her shawl from the hook. Tossing it over her shoulders, she marched defiantly toward Tabor. Giving him a look of outrage, she wagged a finger at him.

  “I don’t believe you actually invited anyone else, Mr. Stanton.”

  “Tabor, please,” he reminded as he gently plucked the shawl from her shoulders and folded it over his arm. “I assure you I did.” Lilah stepped back. His cold smile terrified her. “Another young woman of impeccable background, like yourself,” he continued. “And a performer you may have heard about.” Tabor took Lilah’s arm and led her to the table, helping her to be seated.

  The tiny hairs on the back of her neck stood up in dread. “Who is that?” she asked weakly.

  “A charming woman.” Tabor paused until he had also seated himself. Dark amusement filled his eyes. “I’ve actually met Delilah. I do confess I haven’t had the pleasure of meeting Miss Alden.”

  Looking every bit the damsel in distress, Lilah trembled under Tabor’s harsh stare, teetering on the verge of hysteria. The shadow of panic crossed swiftly over her face, but was chased away by her rising anger. Tabor had set a trap worthy of Delilah. If she could have found any kind words for him she might have commended his tactics. But her mind quickly sped to those she wished to protect: Dinah, Loo, Papa. As much as she wanted to storm out of the room, she had to stay.

  “What is it you want, Tabor?” Her voice took on a trace of huskiness, her movements a languid grace.

  “That’s amazing,” he said, noting the change in her. “A slant of the eye, a curl of the lips, a slight change in the voice, and Lilah Damon is gone. I wonder what Miss Alden is like.”

  Her eyes flashed and she threw her head back proudly. “Miss Alden is merely a name on a hotel registration, a convenience for making a transition. You know that, of course.”

  “I assumed it,” he corrected. “You are remarkably good at what you do, Lilah...Delilah.” He laughed. “I don’t know which one of you I’m talking to.”

  “We are one and the same.”

  “I’m still not certain of that,” he said, reminded he had done himself out of the more intimate confirmation. “If it hadn’t been for seeing the horse, I would never have known.”

  “About the horse...” she said.

  “My horse.”

  She sighed. “Your horse. I suppose you want him back or to be paid what he’s worth.” Tabor didn’t respond so she went on. “You’ve seen how Papa feels about the stallion. If it’s all the same to you, I prefer to buy him.”

  He let her wait because she did it so poorly. “It isn’t,” he said.

  Nibbling at her lip, Lilah realized she had to try to change his mind. The thought of taking the stallion from Papa was painful.

  She spoke softly. “I’ll make it worth your while. I’ll pay you twice what he’s worth. I’m sorry about having you jailed. That was a mistake.”

  Tabor continued to stare, fascinated by the shifts of personality he observed. Delilah demanding. Lilah pleading. Which woman was actually here? Which one was real?

  “You can keep the horse.”

  “Keep him?”

  The amazement in Lilah’s voice, the girlish smile almost undid Tabor. But he couldn’t quite give himself up to it.

  His voice hardened. “You can keep him provided you live up to the terms of our bet: you as my love slave for a week. That’s more than fair, considering I could keep the horse and collect on your debt too.”

  She tensed, feeling her blood run cold. “You can’t mean what you’re saying.”

  “I can. I do. Either make good on Delilah’s bet or give me back the horse. I’ll explain to your father myself.”

  “No!”

  Tabor grinned sardonically. “I was right, wasn’t I? Clement knows nothing about his daughter being Delilah, Flame of the West.”

  “You must not tell him,” she said, panic lifting her voice. “Papa has a weak heart. The shock might bring on an attack. It might kill him.”

  Tabor shook his head. “I won’t tell him.” He paused until she relaxed a bit in her chair. “Not unless you refuse to honor the bet.”

  Lilah paled and looked helpless as a lost lamb. “You don’t know what you’re asking.”

  He shrugged away a pang of guilt, recalling her skill as an actress, finding it difficult even then to remember that the deceitful Delilah lurked behind that guileless face.

  “I’m asking that you honor a bet made in good faith. If anybody has a reason to be upset about this, it’s me. To begin with, you cheated in the card game. After that I had a knot on my head for a week. I spent that week and another in Walsh Peregrine’s jail. I lost my horse. And if that wasn’t enough, I got duped again just trying to do the honorable thing by a woman. You owe me that week, Delilah.”

  “Lilah,” she said weakly. “I’m Lilah. I told you it was all a mistake. I’ll pay you three times what the horse is worth.”

  Tabor’s stony gray eyes held hers. “I don’t want money,” he replied tonelessly. “I want satisfaction.”

  “How can I?” she demanded. “What would I tell Papa? How could I possibly go away with you for a week?”

  She looked near tears, but Tabor refused to be swayed. “A woman who can spend months touring California saloons while her father thinks she’s in St. Louis shouldn’t have much difficulty coming up with an excuse.”

  “This is different,” she said weakly.

  Tabor smiled. “We’ll talk out the details after we eat.”

  He lifted the silver covers from the several dishes of still-steaming food, enough for four. She hoped he didn’t expect her to eat it all. She had no appetite whatsoever.

  * * *

  Back on the settee where the disastrous evening had begun, Lilah accepted a snifter of brandy. She had no reason to keep up the pretense she was a teetotaler. Tabor knew otherwise. Besides, this time he had elected to sit beside her and, listening to what he proposed, she felt the need of strong drink.

  Tabor crushed out the cigarette he had smoked after dinner. “I’ll have my Aunt Sarah write a letter inviting you to stay at the Cooke ranch. It’s about a two-day ride from here.”

  Lilah immediately began calculating ways to shorten the time. Two days down on a stagecoach and two days back. That left only three days she actually had to spend with him. She might even find a way to cut down on that.

  She sat rigidly. Tabor’s nearness caused a whir of uneasy emotions. “I can’t possibly make a trip before Aunt Emily leaves for London. Papa would never allow it.”

  Tabor scowled. He doubted there was anything Lilah couldn’t get her father to agree to. But it would be rude of her to leave Damon House while she had a guest. And it might arouse suspicion.

  “How much longer is she staying?”

  “Two weeks,” Lilah said, adding a few days to the actual departure date.

  Tabor rubbed his chin. “I can wait that long. I promised your father I’d break the stallion for him. That ought to take about two weeks.”

  Lilah finished her brandy but continued to hold the empty snifter. “He’s already broken.” She didn’t like the idea of Tabor spending much of the next two weeks at Damon House.

  “Only for me. Your father wants him so anyone can ride him.”

  She couldn’t disagree with that. She supposed
she would have to put up with him for a while. At Damon House she could manage to avoid him.

  “I wonder,” Tabor shifted his position to get a better look at her, “if you have any idea how intriguing it is to sit here and look at you in that prudish dress knowing there’s a sultry, provocative woman underneath.” His voice dropped dangerously low as he unfolded her fingers from the empty glass and set it aside. “What would it take to make you become Delilah right now?”

  The sensations she felt confused her. She decided the shiver slithering down her spine was fear, fear that Tabor had decided not to wait the two weeks.

  “Delilah isn’t really anyone at all,” she said weakly, sliding toward the arm of the settee and away from him. “She’s like a character from a play. She seems real but she isn’t.”

  He slid closer, making up the distance she had put between them. “You play Delilah to perfection. Like Samson, I expected to be missing my hair when I woke up in that jail cell.”

  Lilah trembled when he took her arm. His darkening eyes hypnotized her and she offered no resistance when he reached for the satin ribbon that held her curls off her neck. He untied it slowly, allowing the tight cluster to fall over her shoulders. When his fingers slid into the curls and started smoothing them, she held her breath.

  “You haven’t told me how you changed your hair.” He bent his head close. She shut her eyes tightly, thinking he was about to force a kiss. But Tabor only lifted a handful of red-gold hair against his cheek. “I like Delilah’s perfume better,” he said.

  She opened her eyes to find him grinning at her.

  “I don’t.” She snatched her hair from his hand. “I used henna to darken my hair and my brows. With rouge on my cheeks and kohl on my eyelids, it’s a rather effective feminine disguise,” she added.

  He gave her a measuring look. “Everything else is you, I trust.”

  His sarcasm smarted. Why did he bother to ask? He had made quite sure of that before she knocked him unconscious. But why should she be the only one feeling miserable? She could give as good as she got. She lifted her chin.

  “It puzzles me, Tabor,” she said, offering a wry smile, “how your aunt could debase herself by helping with your sordid plan. Just what kind of woman is she?”

  She thought for a minute her words had hit their mark. Tabor’s mocking grin changed to an angry frown. “My aunt is a fine woman. Don’t think otherwise,” he warned.

  “So fine she doesn’t mind if you abuse a woman in her house?”

  He realized what she was up to. His grin returned. Seeing defeat, her sapphire eyes shot hot sparks at him. He had wondered how long before Delilah broke through Lilah Damon’s icy control.

  “Sarah doesn’t interfere in my private affairs and I don’t interfere in hers. You won’t be embarrassed.” He cupped Lilah’s chin in his hands and looked directly in her eyes. “And you won’t be abused, sweetheart,” he said softly. “You’ll belong to me for a week, but I won’t do anything you don’t want me to. You have my promise.”

  “Your promise?” What was that worth? She hoped he couldn’t feel her unsteadiness. “Then I might as well not go,” she said boldly. “I can’t stand the sight of you.”

  Tabor slid his hands around her throat, holding them there briefly. Many hours he’d thought of placing his hands there, of what he would do. Purposefully he slid them to her shoulders. He felt her quivering.

  “Then you’ll have to keep your eyes closed,” he said huskily. “Because I’m certain you don’t feel the same about me touching you.”

  Lilah inhaled sharply as she caught the full measure of passion smoldering in his dark eyes. Then she did shut her lids again, afraid what she saw in his eyes would spill into her own. But as her lashes fluttered down, she knew she had acted too late. The sensations Tabor seemed to turn on at will raged full and hot in her veins.

  “I don’t,” she mumbled, thinking this was a fine time to give up her lies. “I wish I did, but I don’t.”

  He touched her lips so softly she thought it only her imagination. Her tiny moan of response brought more gentle pressure from his lips. How was it the man who brought her such despair was also the man who gave her the sweetest pleasure? By some dark trick of fate she had become the victim of her own justice. The hardest thing about it was that she wasn’t fighting him, she was fighting herself. And finding it increasingly difficult to understand why.

  She refused to open her eyes. As long as she kept them shut, it seemed like a dream that her arms encircled his neck and that she liked the feel of him so much.

  Tabor teased at her lips until she let him past that barrier and inside. His hands at her waist pulled her into his lap. For a few moments he buried his face against her throat and in the soft curls tumbling over her shoulder. Had he promised not to touch her tonight? He didn’t think so. One hand explored the hollows of her back, the other slipped buttons through tiny silk loops. He would have to be careful of the promises he made. They were proving difficult to keep.

  Lilah felt the warmth of his kisses against her neck and strained against him. His lips continued to explore her satin flesh, searing a trail past her shoulders and to the neckline of her gown. Behind her his hands parted that garment and slipped it from the path of his lips. She moaned at the new-felt freedom as he uncovered her breasts. His lips touched like whispers, warm and moist on her skin. She was aware he set her on her feet and partially aware that he skimmed the white silk gown from her body. Shortly she was back in his lap and his mouth again was teasing the rosy crests of her breasts.

  “You know I want you, sweetheart.”

  “Yes,” she whispered. His want was apparent, throbbing and insistent against her hips.

  “I need for you to tell me it’s all right.”

  Her head swirled inside. Half of her shouted no. A lady should never allow a man to touch her so intimately, so boldly. The other half of her shouted yes. Take what you want. Live by your own rules.

  “It is,” she whispered, making her choice—if she had ever had one, the way his hands rested so provocatively on her thighs, the way the stroking of his fingers sent a pulsing warmth through her.

  Tabor tucked his arms beneath her and stood, Lilah in his arms. Whispering loving words in her ear, he carried her to the bedroom and the high-backed chestnut bed draped with warm red velvet covers. Giving in to the temptation of one more kiss, Tabor yielded to the softness of her lips, then eased her down on the covers. He stepped back to disrobe.

  Lilah could keep her eyes closed no longer. She opened them and viewed Tabor shedding his tie and vest and then the silk shirt. He slid off his boots and unfastened his trousers and pushed them down. Lilah’s eyes grew endlessly wide. Her imagination, grand as it was, had never shown her such a picture as this, the male animal, strong, virile, and in a full arousal. Self-consciously Lilah pulled the edges of her camisole over her breasts. Were all men like this? So imposing. So big. Could she possibly accommodate such a man? Could she, even though her body burned and shook with wanting.

  Her eyes lingered on Tabor as he stepped free of his trousers. He was quite beautiful, for a man. She was surprised to see the richly tanned skin went farther than his neck and wrists and that even those areas generally untouched by the sun were a dark gold color. She forgot his imposing size as the wonder and wanting overtook her.

  But when Tabor eased back into the bed, suddenly her Victorian upbringing squashed her reckless abandon.

  “Wait!” she cried, scurrying back against the pillows. “Wait! I’ve changed my mind.”

  “The hell you have,” Tabor growled, his eyes flashing her a warning that he wouldn’t be toyed with.

  Lilah gave a choked, desperate cry and slid across the bed and off the other side. “I’m not ready for this,” she whispered.

  “The hell you aren’t,” he said, coming after Lilah and backing her into a corner.

  Lilah crossed her arms over her chest and fell back against the unrelenting wall. “You don’t
understand,” she croaked. “I’m scared.”

  “You damn well ought to be.” His menacing voice sent a chill over her skin. “Not that I think you are. Delilah invited many men to her hotel room. Men who didn’t wake up in jail.”

  “You’re wrong,” she cried. “I never...”

  “You’re wrong,” he echoed. “I know about the mirror trick. I reckon you were a little more kindly disposed toward the men who didn’t catch you cheating. I reckon they left Delilah the next morning thinking empty pockets were worth the experience.”

  “No!” she gasped. “No!”

  “You said yes, and I’m holding you to it,” Tabor growled, grabbing her by the waist and tossing her back to the bed. He fell across her, holding her down with ease. Lilah fought him furiously, but Tabor, overcome with passion didn’t register that her resistance came from fear and not defiance. He ripped her camisole away and would have done the same to her petticoats had she not covered her eyes with her hands and started to sob. Angrily he pulled back. “You little witch. Don’t think you’ll get away with that another time.” But when her sobs continued, Tabor let her loose. He wouldn’t take a woman by force. “Go on,” he shouted. “Get out of here. Get dressed.”

  Lilah flew from the room and pulled on her discarded gown as fast as she could. Tabor, cursing her bitterly, pulled on his trousers and stood scowling and watching from the doorway of the bedroom. Humiliatingly conscious of his eyes, Lilah fumbled with her gown. Why had she chosen one that buttoned down the back, one she couldn’t fasten herself? It appalled her, but after long minutes of trying on her own, she had no option but to ask him to fasten it for her.

  Tabor was no more pleased about the task and did it as quickly as he could. But somehow his fingers seemed to have lost their dexterity and he struggled with the buttons. When that arduous work was finished, she found the blue ribbon and attempted to put her hair back the way it had been before. It was hopeless.

  Tabor brought her shawl and draped it over her shoulders. His scowl hadn’t eased in the least. Lilah’s hand clutched nervously at her throat and discovered to her horror that her pearls were missing. She balanced their value against Tabor’s disposition.

 

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