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Johanna Lindsey, Once a princess.txt

Page 26

by Once A Princess (lit)


  He was furious that she had tried to kill him—as he saw it. Furious that she was lying about someone trying to kill her—as he saw it. So if she tried to calm him down now so they could make love for no other motive than mutual desire, his calm might take him right out of here and right back to Alicia, because his fury with Tanya would still be there, just under control again.

  The decision was almost out of her hands, her senses already heightened, her innards already whirl­ing with excitement. So she asked herself the simple question, did she love Stefan Barany?

  She was afraid she just might, but she wasn’t pos­itive yet. But she was positive that she wanted him, and did not want him to go to another woman to satisfy his needs, even his present need to slake his anger with mindless fornication. So she had her an­swer. She’d take him this way, even if it was savage and over quickly … but it wouldn’t be that way, would it? She’d been thinking only of the anger, and comparing Stefan with other men under similar cir­cumstances, forgetting that even in anger, Stefan took his time at this, and wasn’t rough with her, merely ruthlessly determined.

  She was forgetting one other thing, too, Tanya thought with a shiver of pleasurable anticipation. There was very little that could stop Stefan from having his way. She had never been able to. But he had been stopped those other times, by a noise, by an imminent intrusion. Suddenly a measure of ur­gency entered her own responses. She let everything he’d already aroused in her loose, and began kissing him back with every bit of it.

  He had been moving her slowly, unknowingly, toward the bed. The backs of Tanya’s legs came up against it now and gave her a start of surprise. She wasn’t surprised when she was lowered to the mat­tress, however, and that, too, was done slowly, care­fully, without releasing her mouth. She couldn’t seem to impart her urgency to him, but that shouldn’t sur­prise her either. He was oblivious of everything but the anger, the compelling need to release it, but in his own way, not as she’d like, and his way was without haste, instinctively similar to how it would be if he weren’t angry. She should be grateful for that, and she would be—if there were no interrup­tions this time.

  The back of her sleeping gown had been raised before she was lowered to the bed. The front lacings had been untied without her notice. The kiss broke now as the white linen was whisked over her head, but his lips came back almost immediately. And now she had his heat, what she associated with his anger but was always there, his skin so hot to her touch. And his weight, glorious sensation, pressing against her breasts, her belly, settling between the legs she opened for him quite willingly.

  While his tongue swirled with delicious languor inside her mouth, his hands slipped between their bodies, one to fully cover each breast, kneading, gently plucking at her nipples, then not so gently squeezing once they were quivering buds. It all had the same effect, however, making her wild to have more, the heat in her loins igniting, fast becoming an ache.

  He was caressing her arms now, her face, kissing her fiercely one moment, gently the next. And she thought she would go mad because he still wasn’t reacting to her own passion, which had already sur­passed anything she’d ever felt before. Nor would he stop kissing her long enough for her to tell him. But she was hoping she wouldn’t have to, for the fear was there that if he did stop, if he heard her voice now, he’d come to his senses and stop altogether, leaving her in this agonizing state of need.

  She tried to calm herself, to relax, reasoning that she must not be going about this right, that she should just follow Stefan’s lead, because although she might know what went where, she was basically ignorant about lovemaking, at least the subtleties of it. But she couldn’t do it. She writhed, she arched, she pulled at his hips, his hair, his skin. He was in no tearing rush, but she was going to be a cinder before long.

  Finally, she found the thick bulge pressed to her loins and undulated against it in a simulation of what she wanted. That brought his hand to that area, but he didn’t actually touch her there. When she realized he was removing his trousers instead, she almost melted with relief. And then he was entering her and she held on tight.

  Somewhere deep in Stefan’s mind, he knew Tanya wasn’t fighting him anymore, was instead wantonly responding to him, and he knew there was something that should bother him about that. But what it was never quite surfaced in the quagmire of his thoughts, blessedly blank for the most part, rife with rage and passion the rest. He was functioning purely on in­stinct, primitive in nature, and thanks to too much alcohol, on the drunken assurance that he wasn’t taking anything that didn’t belong to him.

  The anger was still there, but lust was now over­riding it, and that was suddenly so strong at finding her so wet and tight, he didn’t even notice his dif­ficulty in entering her. The slight tug and give of her maidenhead was nothing next to all that moist heat squeezing him. And when he reached her depths, he stayed there, the pleasure so great he couldn’t bear to move.

  It was that pleasure that brought him to his senses, wiping out his anger completely. And with the anger gone, he knew exactly what he had done, and that damn near sobered him completely. He was inside her, deep inside her at last, and he couldn’t recall with any clarity the details of having got there.

  Guilt washed over him in waves and would have unmanned him, but he was still encased in the tight­est, warmest sheath he had ever entered, and that exquisite sensation was separate from everything else he was suddenly feeling.

  After the last time this had almost happened, he had sworn to himself that he would never take Tanya in anger. That was one of the reasons he had stayed away from her on the ship, where forced confinement could so easily make tempers flare. But he hadn’t been back with her one complete day before he took her anyway. Only she had responded to him—hadn’t she? Or was that wishfulness on his part, her wanton wildness actually resistance?

  Even as he thought it, her arms suddenly tightened around his neck, and in his stillness he felt it, un­believably, without his having moved at all for the past few moments, she was climaxing, the pulse of it surrounding him, squeezing him with each glorious throb, and firing him with a savage exultation that whipped his desire for her to a frenzied peak. He thrust, and thrust again, and went over the edge so explosively, he wasn’t sure he would survive it.

  Tanya held on tight and smiled very smugly to herself when Stefan finally went wild in his release. She’d caused that, and if it was anywhere near what she’d just experienced, then the man ought to get down on his knees and kiss the ground she walked on. She was certainly ready to make that concession. Having someone tell you, “It’s wonderful. Try it,” just doesn’t prepare you for that maelstrom of sen­sation. Nothing could.

  He dropped his head on her shoulder now, his heartbeat slamming against her breast, his breath stir­ring the hair tangled about her neck. Her fingers smoothed his black mane, her other hand caressed his back. She felt so close to him just then, and that was a wonderful feeling in itself. She didn’t want him to move, didn’t want him to remove that part of him that was inside her, because it still felt so deli­cious, having him there.

  He did stir at last, not to actually raise his head, but with a sudden tensing of his body. “Did I hurt you?”

  The pain of her maidenhead breaking had been so minimal, it wasn’t worth mentioning. “No, but why is that always your first concern when you calm down?”

  “Tanya, I am anything but calm. Did … I … hurt …you?”

  “Well, of course it hurt a little bit, but only for a second.”

  Stefan’s guilt escalated. Only for a second? Dear God, had he hit her? He reared up to look at her face, but he could see no bruises. That didn’t mean she wouldn’t have them elsewhere, if not now, then tomorrow. Alicia had always claimed bruises galore, though he’d never actually seen any. If he had bruised Tanya…

  Tanya groaned inwardly when he rolled away from her and swiftly fastened his trousers. Then he left the bed and started heading toward the door. Wa
s that it? she wondered. Not even a reaction for discovering she wasn’t the whore he thought her to be? Vasili had said he would be furious if he discovered her a virgin, but he wasn’t. He was in the strangest mood, as if he felt guilty for taking her innocence, which was ridiculous, since it would have been his on their wedding night anyway, in the not-too-distant future.

  “I really am fine, Stefan,” she told him, stressing each word. “Better than fine, actually. You should know by now that I’m not some fragile flower you have to worry about touching.”

  He turned at the door. There was a glow in his eyes. She didn’t know it was self-directed, or that he was referring to taking her in anger when he said, “You may be accustomed to variation in lovemaking, but that doesn’t excuse … This won’t happen again, Princess. You have my word on that.”

  Tanya stared at the door after it had closed, her eyes incredulously wide. Had he just promised what she thought he had? Never to make love to her again? And then the rest of what he’d said hit her. My God, he still thought she was a whore! He’d been so caught up in his rage, he hadn’t even noticed her virginity!

  Tanya almost laughed. It was too fantastic! Her only proof of innocence was gone now. He’d taken it and didn’t even know it. God, what a joke—on her. Well, she’d wanted him to want her despite what he thought, and it looked as if that was the only way it could be now—except he’d had his “one night,” and obviously, that was really all he wanted from her.

  Chapter 41

  “What does that look like to you?”

  “Blood.”

  “Not that,” Tanya said in exasperation tinged with embarrassment. “The tear in the sheet.”

  Serge moved up to the side of the bed for a closer examination. Tanya waited impatiently. She wished she hadn’t had to do this, to drag him out of bed a second time that night to show him the proof of her attempted murder. If he and Stefan had had the decency to believe her before, she wouldn’t have had to. And the only reason she had discovered the proof for herself was because that damned virgin’s blood was right next to it on the sheet, and that had drawn her eyes to the spot. But when she did notice it, she had stopped fretting about Stefan and had gone straight to Serge’s room. Someone had to believe her about what had happened tonight, and she wasn’t about to try to convince Stefan again.

  Besides, after she’d thought about it, and got angry about it, she decided she didn’t want Stefan seeing that blood on the sheet, so she hadn’t even considered going to him with what she’d found. If his anger was so blinding that he could miss something so monumental, the fact that she had willingly given him her virginity, then he could rot before she’d tell him—or show him.

  That she hadn’t heard Alicia return to her own room possibly had a little to do with her decision. And she had listened for her, too. But obviously Stefan had gone back to spend the rest of the night with his mistress, was curled up in bed with her now, sleeping or … He could definitely rot.

  She watched Serge as he stuck his finger through the hole, right into a similar hole in the mattress beneath. “It’s the cut of a knife, your Highness,” he said, drawing the same conclusion she had.

  “Exactly. “

  “I’ll get Stefan.”

  “Don’t bother. He’ll just think I put it there. But I want at least one of you to believe me and take precautions, because I wasn’t dreaming tonight. A sound woke me, I reached for my knife, but I was too slow. My pillow was used to try and suffocate me. I finally must have pricked one of the attacker’s arms with my knife—”

  “Then that is his blood on the sheet?”

  “No,” she gritted out. “As I was saying, he released the pillow and I immediately rolled off the bed. But it was so dark in here, he might not have realized I wasn’t in the bed anymore. It looks like he tried to stab me then, and I guess he might have tried again if I hadn’t started screaming.”

  “Then you were cut?”

  She wished he would stop worrying over that red stain. “No, I wasn’t.”

  “Then whose blood is that?”

  “Mine,” she said, hoping he’d conclude that it was her time of the month and let it go at that.

  “I don’t—” He didn’t get any further, his face suffusing with heat. But he didn’t draw the conclu­sion she had hoped he would. “Stefan returned here after we searched the house.”

  It wasn’t really a question. And since Stefan might mention it to him, there was no point in denying it. “Yes.”

  “Was he very angry on finding you a virgin?”

  Did he have to be so damn discerning? “He didn’t notice. He was too angry to begin with.”

  Serge’s cheeks got even hotter. “I will get him now. He has to see—”

  “Like hell,” she fairly snarled. “I’m not dealing with his anger again tonight, thank you. And I don’t care what he thinks, so forget about that damn stain, will you? Just tell me you believe someone tried to kill me.”

  “I do.”

  She sighed in relief before asking, “Do I have enemies that no one has told me about?”

  “None that I can think of now. Those you had are all dead.”

  “Would someone want me dead to keep me from marrying Stefan?”

  “That is a possibility, yet there are not many who know of your betrothal, or remember it, and even less who know that you are still alive. You disap­peared when you were only a baby. Most people think you are dead.”

  “How nice.”

  He smiled at her tone. “It was better to let them think so while there were still Stamboloffs lurking about. But even though Stefan was sent to bring you home, it is doubtful Sandor would announce your existence until you were there to prove it.”

  “All right. Obviously we’re not going to figure out who or even why. Tell me this, then. Why would this would-be murderer try to smother me—which was taking a good deal of time, I don’t mind telling you—when he had that knife on him? He could have just stabbed me to begin with.”

  “Perhaps he didn’t want to take the credit for it. “

  “What do you mean?”

  “He could have wanted it to look like you merely died in your sleep—”

  “I’m in perfect health!” she interrupted indig­nantly.

  “—for some inexplicable reason,” he continued. “That way, no one would hunt him down.”

  “And he would get away with it, no one the wiser,” she grouched. “I have to tell you, I really don’t like this bastard, whoever he is.”

  “But killing you, your Highness, was more im­portant to him than not being hunted down, or he wouldn’t have resorted to the knife when his first plan failed.”

  “Then I guess it’s fortunate I had enough breath left to scream.”

  “Very fortunate,” he agreed, then insisted, “Ste­fan will have to be told.”

  “About the attacker.” She shrugged. “Fine. You can try to convince him, because I won’t.” And then her eyes narrowed threateningly as a blush suffused her cheeks. “But don’t even think about telling him about that bloodstain, Serge. He made love to me and left here still thinking I’m a whore. And if he couldn’t even feel my maidenhead, he’ll never be­lieve that blood is what it is. He’ll think I cut myself to put it there, and I’m not going to be accused of deception on top of everything else.”

  Her plain speaking had his cheeks glowing again. “When he is in that kind of rage—”

  “You aren’t going to make excuses for him, are you?” she asked coldly.

  “He had also been drinking quite heavily tonight, your Highness.”

  “I see you are,” she said in disgust and turned her back on him. “I’m not going to get any sleep tonight until there is a lock on that door. Stefan was going to take care of it, but he got distracted. Would you mind seeing to it before you go back to bed?”

  “Certainly, your Highness. I will attend to it my­self, as well as sleep outside your door.”

  “You needn’t go that far
,” she protested.

  “On the contrary. Stefan would have it no oth­er—”

  “Hang Stefan!”

  Chapter 42

  The first thing Tanya noticed when she came out of the house was not all the servants scurrying about, getting the last of the baggage loaded into the coaches lined up there, nor the twenty guards already mounted, nor even Stefan standing by the first coach, waiting for her with his three personal guards around him. What she noticed was that Alicia wasn’t there.

  Well, she wasn’t going to ask why not. If Stefan had decided it would be prudent to be discreet now and not travel with his mistress in tow, it was just too late, as far as Tanya was concerned.

  “You’re late,” Stefan said tersely as she reached him.

  “Fat lot I care,” she shot back. “I’d just as soon not go at all.”

  He dismissed the others with his hand probably because he hadn’t expected her to be as testy as he was. Serge, she noted, didn’t look guilty, so at least he hadn’t told Stefan what she didn’t want him to tell.

  “What is that supposed to mean?” Stefan de­manded as soon as they were alone.

  “You figure it out, your Majesty. You’re rather good at drawing conclusions, after all.”

  She started to climb in the coach without aid. Ste­fan jerked her back around. “Why didn’t you tell me what you told Serge?”

  So that’s what had him growling? “You weren’t in a mood to believe me.”

  “You managed to convince him. You didn’t even try to convince me.”

  “As I said, you weren’t in a mood—”

  “Tanya, you are my responsibility. Mine! If I doubt what you tell me, you damn well tell me again, and again, until I believe it. Something as important as this—”

  “Shouldn’t have been doubted in the first place,” she retorted.

  “I agree.” When her eyes widened, he added, “If I had been completely sober last night, I likely would have believed you at the start. I apologize for being less than clearheaded in your time of need.”

 

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