Choosing the Highlander (6 page)

BOOK: Choosing the Highlander
10.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Her loyalty to Milt flickered faintly at this surprising desire. She hadn’t exactly broken up with him. Maybe sex would be a bit much. Still, if Wilhelm demanded it, she just might comply.

“First, you shall regain your strength,” he went on. “Then you shall aid in the birthing of the child. When that is done, you shall travel with me and Terran to Inverness, where we shall all three of us give sworn testimony as to your mistreatment by Ruthven and his men.”

Mistreatment.
What a civil way to put what happened to her. She’d been kidnapped, robbed, assaulted, and nearly murdered. Wait. Had she heard him correctly? “We’re going to Inverness?” That’s exactly where she needed to go.

“Aye. With luck, our testimony will counter any charges Ruthven sets against my cousin and I and cause the man to have a care next time he takes it into his head to harm innocent women for the amusement of his guests.”

That’s all? What about a kiss? Or sex?
 

Wilhelm glowered at her as if he expected her to argue. Apparently, he was finished listing his terms.

“All right.” She was happy to do everything he’d asked and oddly disappointed he hadn’t asked for more.

She would do what Wilhelm asked. Then they would part ways, he and his cousin Terran to wherever they lived and she to Druid’s Temple, and from there hopefully home. The trick would be evading questions on the way.

“That’s a good lass.” Wilhelm nodded with satisfaction. “Now that that is settled.” He cupped her face in a large hand and kissed her.

 

Chapter 5

Merciful Lord in heaven. This woman tempts me like no other.
 

Wilhelm had known her less than a full day. In that time she had attempted to lie to him. She had destroyed any chance of success his judicial act had ever possessed by falling into the hands of his most vicious enemy. And yet, this mating of mouths, of breath, and of wills erased every kernel of annoyance she had caused him.

Unable to keep his distance from her any longer, he’d taken her lips the way he’d longed to since entering the room to find her awake and more lovely than a heather-dressed meadow. He pressed his mouth to hers while she lay beneath him in naught but bed linens, fully expecting her to protest, for surely a lass so bonny and brave must belong to someone.

But she did not protest. Rather, she met him movement for movement as if this kiss had been written in ancient scrolls of prophecy, and they merely carried out the plan.

Her hand shaped to his shoulder, welcoming him closer. Her acceptance of his advance thrilled him to his core.

He was only too happy to heed her summons. A frisson of carnal delight lengthened his cock beneath his plaid as he pressed her more snugly to the bed. She gasped into his mouth, and her legs parted to accommodate his knee.

“Aye,” he whispered. “That’s a good lass. Open for me now.”

How brazen he was! Never before had he grown this heated with a lass. He prized his control as well as he prized his position as heir to his father’s seat. But this woman made him lust for indulgences he’d thought himself too disciplined for.

He stroked the corner of her mouth with his thumb, and to his astonishment, she flicked it with her tongue and parted her lips in an invitation he wasted no time accepting. It occurred to him she might think to manipulate him with her affections, but no. He sensed truth in her kiss. And he saw surprise in her eyes suggesting that like him she did not normally behave in this manner.

She would have him believe her to be from the south, from England, but he’d recognized the lie in an instant
. Truth sense,
his mother called it, a remnant of his fey ancestry like the battle lust, which she insisted made him a berserker like his father. Wilhelm tended to side with his father, who attributed their shared ability to discern truth from lies to good instincts. ’Twas no more than a family trait passed from generation to generation, laird to laird and mayhap, like his gift for battle, a blessing from the Lord.

Whatever the origin of his truth sense, he’d felt it powerfully when she’d been bound upon Ruthven’s pyre, proclaiming her innocence. He felt it just as powerfully now, as her body communicated to him more clearly than any words a truth growing between them: they were meant for each other.

Her eyes closed as their kiss deepened, but he kept his open. He would not waste a single moment of appreciating her novel beauty. Her hair ranged in shade from burned caramel to red rock, and when her eyes were open, he saw in them every earthy color under the sun, streaks of sea green, palest gold, rich loam, sky blue, and even fiery sienna. Hazel, the color was called. Too simple a word for the complexity he had never noticed until her. He could watch her for days, nay years, and still long to watch some more.

He didn’t even ken her name.

Terran would have no qualms about committing such an intimate act with a near stranger, but Wilhelm was not his cousin. Cursing himself for his lack of control, he lifted his face from hers. Just in time, too, as his father’s former schoolmate chose that moment to return with somat for her to eat.

She panted silently and touched trembling fingertips to her lips as he put a respectable distance between them. When she opened her eyes, her gaze lingered on him like a caress before acknowledging the abbot’s presence.

Aye. She felt it too, this connection between them.

Anselm deposited a tray on the table next to the candles and slipped out without comment, even though it had to be evident what Wilhelm had been about before he’d come in. He would not be surprised if the abbot chided him later. For now, he was content to give his full attention to his charge.

“Tell me your name,” he commanded.

Her eyes flashed in that way of hers that told him she didn’t make a habit of following orders.

Och,
her brazen spirit drew him from the moment he first saw her, when she’d been demanding Ruthven let her go despite being nude, bound, gagged, and outnumbered. Such bravery! Such intrepid determination!

“You told me no questions tonight.” Her voice scratched like sun dried wool not yet tamed into softness. The damage to her tender throat and lungs made him lust to slay her abusers all over again. Noticeably absent was her feigned English speech.

He suppressed a grin, wondering if she’d done it intentionally. “Simply telling me your name would have required fewer words than the rebuke, my lady, if your throat pains thee.”

“It wasn’t a rebuke.” A look of affront tugged her eyebrows low over those captivating eyes.

How was it her every expression affected his viscera? With each change in her features, his stomach leapt and dove like a hawk in pursuit of prey.

“Only a reminder.” The briefest flicker of nervousness belied the stubborn lift of her chin.

The kiss had made her uncertain. Before, she’d approached him as an adversary, though why she should do so, he could not guess. Now, she recognized the connection between them, but, if he guessed correctly, she feared it.

The lass needed time. She needed food and rest. He would ask no more of her for now. Not even her name. It mattered not. His heart knew her regardless of what she called herself.

“Consider me reminded, sweet lady.” He inclined his head in farewell. “Good rest to you, then. Until later.” He brought the tray to her bed. The monks serving in the kitchen this morning had prepared parritch, buttered bread and ale. The pale color of the drink suggested it was the second brew from which the monks themselves partook rather than the stronger first brew they sold to fund their order.

Once Wilhelm cleared his name and could bring her to Dornoch, he would have a feast prepared for her at every meal. He would serve her fine French wine instead of weakened ale. He would dress her in gowns and drape her in gems. His father would marry them. Mayhap by this time next year, he’d have a bairn with her.

If he could clear his name. Otherwise, all his dreaming would be for naught.

“Wait.”

He paused at the door.

“Thank you,” she said. “For—” She cleared her throat. “Rescuing me.” The proud lass disliked the fact she’d needed rescuing. “And it’s Constance. My name is Constance.” Her gaze lowered before rising up to challenge him once more. Rosy color bloomed in her cheeks.

She’d given him a gift. Not just her gratitude and her name, but a wee bit of her trust and formidable will. If he lusted to subdue her entirely, he sensed he must be tender with her. The realization came as a shock. Never would he have imagined he would crave a willful woman at all, or that he would relish taming such a woman with gentleness.

Like a spirited filly.

“Constance,” he repeated, liking the sound of the syllables as well as the meaning, steadfast, permanent. His father’s favorite request from the bard came to mind.
My Constant Rose.
 

Aye, she would be his steadfast lady, the permanent compliment to his life. But only if he could provide her with the security his position as heir to a barony and lairdship offered. As it stood, he would be accountable for killing Ruthven’s guards and executioner unless a magistrate ruled his actions had been justified. If he obtained no such ruling, he could lose far more than an act of parliament.

“Rest, now,” he told her, and he left to find Terran and check on the other woman. Every step away from Constance pulled taut places low inside him. His very bowels objected to his leaving her.

Och,
he had better set things right in Inverness. Because it was just a matter of time before he took what he knew to be his, regardless of the consequences.

#

Connie had never been more grateful for bland oatmeal. She chewed the mixture, which was like grainy bread moistened with milk and washed it down with warm beer weak on the hops but strong on the malt. Not a bad meal all in all. It certainly did the trick of sating her hunger.

Testing her legs, she slipped out of bed to place the tray back on the dresser. Putting weight on her feet made them feel like sausages someone had forgotten to prick before cooking. The pain-pressure made her clench her teeth. She’d lain out in the sun too long one time at Lake Michigan with high school friends. The pain the next day had been similar to what she felt now. Maybe that meant her injuries were on par with a bad sunburn. One could hope, anyway.

A knock sounded at the door.

“Come in.” Her voice still rasped, but she could use it without coughing.

The monk Wilhelm had called Father Anselm entered, smiling kindly. “I’ve brought a salve for your burns,” he said, handing her a shallow jar.

The substance inside reminded her of the bacon fat she kept in a can under her kitchen sink.

“How are you feeling?” He spoke slowly enough that she could understand him despite his thick brogue. Did he wear his hair tonsured under that white handkerchief? What was it like to be a monk in Scotland in…whatever year this was?

She had better not ask any questions if she wanted to fly under radar, so to speak.

“Better. Thank you, Father.” Instinct had her return to the English accent. For some reason, she only felt comfortable speaking naturally with Wilhelm, and only him because he somehow saw through this precaution.

Anselm seemed to accept her accent, so she carried on with it as she took the jar and unwrapped the linen cover. A round slab of cork served as the jar’s cover. There was a date written on the cork. “Fourteen eighty-two,” she read, stunned. She’d traveled almost exactly 500 years.

“It’s still good, I assure you. Five years is nothing for that salve. It lasts an eternity.”

She stared at the date, doing the math. If the salve was made five years ago, in 1482, that would make it 1487. Judging by the weather, it was wintertime. She wouldn’t press her luck by asking the month and day.

Blinking to focus on Father Anselm, she forced a smile. “I’m sure it’s perfectly fine. Thank you. For the salve and the meal and, well, everything.” She used a fingernail to lift the cork and sniffed the salve. “What is it made of?”

“Mostly beeswax and honey from the abbey’s hives.” He leaned back on his heels and folded his hands in front. A casual pose, likely meant to put her at ease along with his gentle manner.

She remained wary, however. Wilhelm treated this man with respect, as if he were in authority. She would follow suit.

“Also aloe for its soothing properties,” he went on, conversationally, “comfrey for reduction of swelling, and root of burdock to speed the healing and prevent infection. I placed a bit of burdock infusion in your ale as well. Did you taste it too strongly?”  He wrinkled his nose.

The ale had tasted bitter, but not the way a hoppy brew should. She’d drunk it anyway, figuring Wilhelm wouldn’t poison her after going to so much trouble to rescue her. Besides, she’d been hungry enough to eat and drink just about anything.

“It was fine. Thank you.” She had never heard of most of the ingredients he’d mentioned, except aloe, but she wouldn’t risk offending him by asking more questions. As soon as he left, she would put the mixture on a small patch of healthy skin to test it before using it on her burns.

“’Tis an honor to serve a charge of the Murray.” Anselm said with a bow of his head. “If all is well, I shall return to my other duties.”

“Of course. But please, tell me, how is the other woman?”

A pleat formed between his brows. “I am afraid she is unwell. I have sent for a sister of the faith who performs midwife duties on occasion. But she shan’t arrive until tonight at the earliest.”

“Is there anything I can do to help?”

“Mayhap the lass would like some company. She sleeps fitfully and suffers from stomach pains when she tries to eat. But use the salve and rest for a while first. Your feet are in wont of mending.”

Rest sounded good, but her heart went out to the poor girl. From her condition, it seemed she had been through harder times than Connie. She resolved to check on her first thing after a good, long sleep.

After Anselm left, a test of the salve produced no ill effects, so she liberally applied it to her reddened skin. The aloe produced a cool tingling, and whatever else was in the greasy substance smelled nice. Getting up one last time before her nap, she blew out the candles.

Other books

Blue Galaxy by By Diane Dooley
Winter Craving by Marisa Chenery
Garden of Beasts by Jeffery Deaver
Stealing the Future by Max Hertzberg
Murder on Sisters' Row by Victoria Thompson
The Smart One by Ellen Meister
La Ira De Los Justos by Manel Loureiro
Slate (Rebel Wayfarers MC) by MariaLisa deMora
Wild for Him by Jill Sorenson