
Her gaze lowered, fastened on his lips, then she swallowed. Light color rose in her cheeks. Her heavy lids lowered, hiding her eyes. She eased back in his arms. “If you would release me, sir…”
He didn’t want to, but he did-slowly, with deliberately obvious reluctance. She’d felt more than good in his arms-she’d felt warm and intensely vital. Intensely alive.
She stepped back, color deepening as his hands brushed her hips as his arms fell from her. She shook out her skirts, refusing to meet his eyes.
“If you’ll pardon me, I must go.”
Without waiting for any answer, she slipped past him, then strode quickly down the path. Turning, he watched her retreat.
Her steps slowed. She stopped.
Then she whirled and looked back at him, meeting his gaze with neither consciousness nor guile. “Who are you?”
She was a gypsy in green framed by the hedges. The directness in her gaze, in her stance, was challenge incarnate.
“Chillingworth.” Turning fully, he swept her a bow, his eyes never leaving hers. Straightening, he added, “And very definitely at your service.”
She stared at him, then gestured vaguely. “I’m late…”
For all the world as if she hadn’t been…
Their gazes held; something primitive arced between them-some promise that needed no words to be made.
Her gaze slid from his, traveling avidly, greedily over him as if she would commit him to memory; he did the same, no less hungry for the sight of her, poised to take flight.
Then she did. She whirled, snatched up her trailing habit, and fled, ducking down a side path toward the house, disappearing from his view.
Gaze locked on the empty avenue, Gyles suppressed an urge to give chase. His arousal gradually faded; he turned. The smile curving his lips was not one of amusement. Sensual anticipation was a currency he dealt in regularly; the gypsy knew well how to bargain.
