He laughed and picked up the pace. She had to skip a little to keep up with his long stride. Did that mean he was eager to play for her or that he was eager to get it over with?
“And here we are.” He swung open an ancient-looking oak door.
“Now this looks like a castle,” she breathed as she scanned the octagonal room with its blocky stone walls and smooth-worn stone floor. Mullioned windows were set into the three-foot-thick walls, and the ceiling was a starburst of rough-hewn wooden beams. “I can picture Rapunzel hanging her hair out the window or Sleeping Beauty pricking her finger on the spinning wheel here.”
“Or a troubadour playing passionate music for his lady?” Gabriel lifted their linked hands to brush his lips over her knuckles.
Delicious tingles shivered through her. “Or that.”
For a moment, their gazes locked, his gray eyes smoky. Then he released her hand and turned away, striding over to pull one guitar case from among the five standing along the wall.
She noticed a couple of fencing foils and masks resting on the floor near the guitars. “Do you fight duels in here too?”
“What? Oh, the foils. Raul feels I don’t take enough breaks, so he pesters me into fencing with him.”
What she wouldn’t give to see those two gorgeous, powerful men crossing swords. Just the thought of it sent a surge of heat through her. “Who usually wins?”
“Whoever has the most frustration to work off.” Gabriel placed the guitar case on the floor by a plain wooden stool and unlatched it. “I hate to admit it, but Raul is a better fencer than I am. And the king is unbeatable.”
“I’ll bet he’s intense.”
“Murderous, in fact.” But he said it with a smile.
Quinn laughed.
“Please.” Gabriel swept his hand toward a carved wooden chair with a green velvet cushion set about six feet away from his stool. He unbuttoned the cuff of his wine red shirt and began to roll it up to his elbow.
She eyed the ornately carved dragons whose heads formed the chair’s handrests. It reminded her of the antiques in Mikel’s office. “Those carvings look fragile. How old is this chair?”
“I have no idea, but if Raul hasn’t damaged it, you won’t. He dragged it in here so he would have someplace comfortable to sit after our fencing matches.”
Quinn sank onto the cushion and wrapped her fingers over the dragon heads. Gabriel rolled up his other sleeve before he perched on the stool. Lifting the guitar out of its case, he crossed his legs so his right ankle rested on his left thigh.
The pose pulled his charcoal trousers tight over his thighs, riveting her attention on the swells of the long muscles. Another wave of heat hit her, and she could feel the flush in her cheeks.
She jerked her eyes up to his face as he tuned the guitar resting on his leg, his gaze vague and inward while his attention focused on sound rather than sight.
His fingers stilled, and he met her eyes for a long moment that was charged with hope, determination, and what might be desire. Then he closed his eyes and ripped the first notes from the guitar.
The long fingers of his left hand skittered along the frets like a spider while his right hand whirred over the strings with the blurred speed of a hummingbird’s wings. Sometimes he used only two fingers, sometimes his whole hand splayed out like a fan, and sometimes he used the guitar as a percussion instrument, striking it in a driving rhythm.
First, he wrapped his body around the guitar, and then he flung his shoulders and head back, his left foot in its glossy black loafer always, always tapping on the stone floor like a metronome.
The music seemed to take over her heartbeat, slowing it to a breathless standstill before whipping it into a frenzy of staccato throbs. She closed her eyes to bathe in the glorious, passionate sound, swaying in the currents it swirled around her. Her fingers drummed on the dragon heads when the tempo grew rapid and held on for dear life when it slowed to a plaintive wail.
Time became entwined with the music, moving at different speeds that Gabriel’s fingers controlled until suddenly, there was silence. No, not quite silence, but a faint sound of surf pounding against rocks underpinned by the rasp of Gabriel’s breathing.
Quinn opened her eyes to find him watching her, his forehead beaded with perspiration, his chest rising and falling as though he’d sprinted up several flights of stairs.
His face held an urgent question that she had no words to answer. Only feelings spinning inside her like a cyclone.
She stood and walked over to him. Threading her fingers into his sweat-dampened hair, she tilted his face up and brought her mouth down on his, pouring out all the inchoate emotions into the press of skin to firm, sculpted skin.
His hands came up to hold her head as he slanted his mouth against hers, the tip of his tongue tracing and teasing. She opened to him so their tongues could dance to the lingering echoes of the music.
She whimpered when he pulled away, saying, “Un momento,” and sliding the guitar out from between them to place it in its case. Then he was on his feet, his arms wrapped around her so that she was pinned against him from shoulder to thigh. She ran her palms up to settle around his neck before their lips met again.
She inhaled the aroma of bergamot and exertion that enveloped her, rubbed her hardened nipples against the wall of his chest, and gasped when he broke the kiss to lick the spot just behind her earlobe.