Lady Lavender

Lady Lavender by Lynna Banning

Book: Lady Lavender by Lynna Banning Read Free Book Online
Authors: Lynna Banning
Ads: Link
a fork through the eggs. “ Maman, she was good to me. We had long talks about Papa and my little brother.”
    He moved toward her. “Jeanne, you’re not twelve now.”
    She turned her back to him.
    Dammit. He tramped out of the front door onto the porch, paced to the steps and back three times, then wheeled and strode back into the warm kitchen. He still cradled his Stetson with the coffee grains in the crown.
    Jeanne was wrapping her apron around the handle of an iron skillet of scrambled eggs, which she then yanked off the stovetop. She headed straight for him. “ Très chaud. Very hot.”
    â€œI like things hot.” He spoke without thinking, then swallowed hard. He knew she’d heard him, because she clanked the skillet down hard onto the kitchen table.
    â€œI learn from Maman how to cook. Our hens laid many—”
    That was all he could take. “Would you just stand still for one damn minute and listen?” he shot. “One thing your mama didn’t teach you was how to have a conversation!”
    Jeanne sent him a look that would broil steak, and for a moment he thought he’d gotten past her defenses. But in the next second he saw he was mistaken.
    â€œMaman,” she said in a determined tone, “had a special way with une omelette. She tip the pan just so…” Jeanne demonstrated, then pivoted away from the table and bent over the wooden sink, her back to him.
    Dammit, he was trying to tell her something and she just plain wasn’t going to listen. He stepped up behind her, close enough to smell her hair. “Stop talking about your maman. ”
    Her head came up but her hands in the wooden sink fell idle. She’d heard him, all right. She just didn’t want to admit it.
    â€œJeanne…”
    She began to scrub hard at a china plate, then another, and another. Then a cup…
    To hell with it. Wash groaned, spun on his heel andstomped out the cabin door. Halfway across the porch he jammed his hat down on his head. It felt funny, kind of crumbly…
    Hell, he’d forgotten about the coffee grounds in his hat.
    Behind him he heard a ripple of her laughter. She stood in the doorway, one hand clapped over her mouth, her eyes shining with amusement.
    With a curse he wheeled toward her. She backed up until she couldn’t go any farther without scorching her skirt on the stove. He snatched off his Stetson, sailed it off into the dark and reached for her. He knew his actions were rough, but he’d had all he could take.
    She shot him a look of surprise, her lips opening to protest, and without thinking he bent to find her mouth.
    At the first touch of her lips, he knew he’d made a big, big mistake. Oh, God, she was sweet, and so soft. The pleasure of kissing her sent a skin-shriveling shudder up his backbone. Her lips were like 180-proof double-distilled brandy, and he drank until he was aching with want.
    He kept kissing her until a strangled sound came out of his throat. He shouldn’t be doing this, but he couldn’t stop. She was the bone stuck in his craw, all right. The thing he couldn’t swallow or cough up.
    He felt like he’d died and gone to hell.

Chapter Seven
    M on Dieu! What does this man think he is doing?
    Alors, he was kissing her, that’s what he was doing!
    She lifted her hand to swat him across his tanned face, but as her arm rose, his lips moved suddenly deeper, more intensely on hers, and her resolve poofed away like so much dust. No man’s kiss had ever been like this, not even Henri’s on the night Manette was conceived.
    She tipped her face to one side and still he did not stop moving his lips over hers. Surely God meant for a man and a woman to enjoy each other, but like this? With such abandon, such dark joy bubbling up inside her? About that, she did not know.
    Her breasts were crushed against his chest and all at once she wanted to slip outside her skin and melt into his

Similar Books

Fat Cat

Robin Brande

A Family Affair

Michael Innes

Flowers for the Dead

Barbara Copperthwaite

The Fatal Fortune

Jayne Castle

Dismissed

Kirsty McManus