Her Reaper's Arms Charlotte Boyett-Compo (rainbow fish read aloud TXT) đź“–
- Author: Charlotte Boyett-Compo
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her face from merely lovely to breathtakingly beautiful and it chased away his
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Her Reaper’s Arms
drowsiness in a heartbeat. He stared at her, transfixed. No woman had ever looked at
him in that way, but then again, no woman had ever met his gaze before.
“Where are you from, milord?” she asked.
“A long way from here,” he mumbled, not wanting to think or talk about his past.
Lea felt his hand tense on hers and knew she had asked something she shouldn’t
have so she said nothing more. When he suddenly tugged on her hand, pulling her
toward him, she moved over, laying her head on his shoulder as naturally as though
she had done it a hundred times before. She snuggled against him as he enclosed her in
the perimeter of that strong arm, his fingers curling around to cup her shoulder. Unsure
of what to do with her hand, she laid it gently in the center of his chest, liking the feel of
those crisp hairs beneath her palm, her other arm trapped between their bodies, her
fingers touching the leather of his pants along his hip.
For a long time they just lay there with his arm cradling her, their breaths mingling,
their heartbeats seemingly synchronized with one another. He covered the hand she
had placed on his chest with his, caressing her fingers gently. When he at last broke the
silence, it was with a question that stunned her.
“Would you consider being my compánach, Lea?” he asked. “My companion?”
She lifted her head from his shoulder and looked up at him with shock clouding her
gray gaze, her full lips parted. “Milord, I…”
“I don’t mean as my mate,” he was quick to tell her. “I would not ask that of you or
any woman—I can not ask it—but just to be here when I pass through, to lie beside me,
to keep me company.” He squeezed her hand. “You would not have to service me. I
would not ask that either.”
She heard such longing in his voice and a touch—of what? Self-pity?—that broke
her heart. He looked like a little boy asking his mother for a toy, the light in his eyes
expectant, enthusiastic.
“I would buy you a house,” he said. “Furnish it. Give you a comfortable allowance.
I would take care of you.”
“In exchange for just being held, milord?” she asked softly. “Just talking to you?”
He smiled hopefully. “Aye, wench,” he said eagerly. “Nothing more. I swear it.”
“You would not expect me to…to…” Her face flamed.
“Service me?” he asked. “Not unless you willingly offered.”
She eased her hand from beneath his, trying not to react to the keen disappointment
that flitted through his hopeful eyes. She laid her palm on his cheek. “You sell yourself
too cheaply, milord,” she said. “You ask little of me but are willing to give so much.”
She caressed his face. “Too much. Surely you know any woman would jump at the
chance of having you as her protector. I am not much to look at and—”
“You are beautiful!” he interrupted her. “You are the most beautiful woman I’ve
ever seen.”
“Milord…” she said in a chiding tone.
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Charlotte Boyett-Compo
“You are.”
She nearly laughed, thinking he was joking, but the earnest look on his face stilled
her twitching lips. “You are serious,” she said.
“Reapers do not lie,” he said, and sat up, twisting to look down at her. She watched
his pectorals jump as though he were offended she would consider that he could tell a
falsehood.
She realized he was holding her hand to his thigh and stroking the back of it with
his other hand. Looking up at him, her gaze wandering over his tousled hair—one dark
curl hanging over his eye—she wanted to thread her fingers through that dark mass to
discover if it was as soft as it looked.
“I could give you everything you have ever dreamt of, Lea,” he told her. “You
would want for nothing.”
Lea searched his gaze and realized he was offering her something far beyond her
ability to understand. Reapers were feared, avoided until needed, and once their job
was finished, the townspeople wanted them gone. What would it be like to be his
woman? How would the good folk of Orson treat her?
“I could take you wherever you wish to go,” he said, reading her mind. “It does not
have to be here.”
Self-conscious to be lying there with him huddled over her, she sat up, feeling the
tremendous strength in his hand as he helped her. “This is my home,” she said. “I am
content here.”
“You would be more content if you did not have to toil like a commoner,” he said.
“What pleases you, milady? Gardening? Reading? Painting?” He hitched a shoulder.
“Sewing?”
She smiled. “I never could sew a decent stitch and I seem to kill whatever I plant.
The only painting I have ever done was a bedroom.” She tucked her lower lip between
her teeth before telling him that she loved to read but books were scarce in Orson.
“Then I’ll ship you a library!” he said. “I spend a lot of time reading myself.”
Lea thought on that for a moment. “Do you mean it, milord? Would you send
books for me to start a library for the town?”
Bevyn blinked. “A library?” he repeated. He was unaccustomed to women thinking
of anyone other than themselves. “You would do that?”
“There used to be one here before the War but it was destroyed in the fighting. I
know there are those who would gladly welcome having a place where they could
come and read, take home a book or two.”
“Then I will see to it,” he declared, his word law. “Orson will become my primary
residence.”
Before she could say anything else, he stretched out beside her, drew her into his
arms and rested his chin atop her head.
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Her Reaper’s Arms
“I can sleep now,” he said as though the entire matter were settled, and within a
matter of moments he was snoring lightly.
Lea marveled at the ease with which he could simply close his eyes and shut down
the world. She had a terrible time falling asleep each night—no matter how tired she
was. Lying in his arms, hearing his steady, even breathing, feeling the overwhelming
strength of him
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