No Other Woman (No Other Series) (39 page)

BOOK: No Other Woman (No Other Series)
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She pushed against him as they exited the room and headed down the hallway and up the stairs for her tower abode. "Laird Douglas, I'm delighted that your intelligent, reasonable brother has met a kind and gentle lass and entered into what appears to be a tender and loving relationship, something with which you are entirely unfamiliar."

"Circumstances—lass."

"I'd not destroy his marriage, and I'd never purposely hurt Sabrina—"

"You'd only destroy the life of
your own child
to honor the MacGinnis name?"

"Nay!" she cried. "I didn't know, I swear to you, I didn't know."

"Do you deny that the boy is ours?"

"No... I don't know. It can't be—except that the lad is... oh, God, where is he?" Shawna demanded.

"I've seen to him."

"You've seen to him? I must see him. David, you tell me that the child is mine, but you don't let me see him? David, tell me, where is—Danny?" she demanded in a pained whisper.

The expression on his handsome face was exceptionally hard. "Safe," he told her.

"Safe—where?"

He leaned toward her. "Safe—away from all who bear the name MacGinnis."

 

 

 

Chapter 21

 

Tears flooded Shawna's eyes; she willed them back, furiously blinking. They reached her tower room; he closed and bolted the door before setting her upon the foot of her bed.

Her child lived. All these years, she had been denied the babe. The cruelest jest of all time had been played upon her, and now she was being asked to pay for the game!

"David, you don't understand. You had no right to take the boy!" she cried to him.

"You've had him for four years. You've not exactly given him great maternal care-—"

Shawna leapt to her feet. "I didn't know! I still don't know, I can't believe... I—"

"You didn't know that you gave birth to a child?" he demanded hotly.

She shook her head. "I—"

"You ask me to believe that?" he demanded incredulously.

"Damn you, if Danny is our child, how could you take him away?" Shawna cried. She suddenly found herself up and running across the floor to him, slamming her fists against his chest.

He caught her wrists. She was sorry for her violence; sorry that she had touched him. His fingers wound around her upper arms, he lifted her, eyes burning into her, until he had retraced her path from the bed. He dropped her there, pinning her down as he leaned over her.

"You've no right to that child."

"Damn you, David, I didn't know!"

"How couldn't you know? You had to know that you were pregnant for a child to come so far!"

"I knew that I was expecting... aye! But I ran away to Glasgow to be away from everyone because I didn't know what had happened that night. And I didn't know what I was going to do after, I was just waiting for the babe... but he came early. I-—I was in horrible pain and the midwife gave me something to drink for it. When I came to, the midwife told me the babe had died. And she handed me a blood-soaked bundle and she suggested that I look and...."

David suddenly pushed away from her, running his fingers raggedly through his hair. He walked away from her, then spun back to her.

"I told you to tell me everything! What more have you lied to me about?"

"I haven't lied to you!"

"Omitting the birth of a child is strangely akin to a lie, as I see it!"

Shawna eased up from the bed once again. "There was no reason to tell you, I tried... I tried to let you know that I certainly suffered from the consequences of that night, but then, it didn't make much sense to tell you that we'd had a child who had died without ever drawing breath."

"And when you saw Danny it never occurred to you that he might be your own?"

"I was handed a dead baby!" Shawna cried. "I held what I thought was my own dead babe in my arms! The poor, misshapen soul was taken away, buried in the earth in a Glasgow kirk. I thought that Danny was a MacGinnis, aye, but I've three healthy young male cousins who have been known to tarry in the village."

He continued to stare at her, hard, implacable.

"God damn you, David, I didn't know!" she cried.

"Then who did?" he demanded.

"I—don't know."

"Who knew you were with child?" he shouted.

"They all—all my family."

"Who came to see you in Glasgow?"

She hesitated.

"Who?" he demanded.

"Alistair was the one who came most frequently. He was the one who finally convinced me to come home. But at one time or another, all of them came to see me."

"Who else from here?"

Shawna hesitated. She shook her head, lowering it. "No one. Just my uncles and cousins."

He came walking toward her then, clutching her shoulders, drawing her against him. "At least one of them, my love," he said to her furiously, "attempted to kill me. And, if what you say is true, made incredible arrangements to steal our child—to see it raised as a poverty-stricken ragamuffin to die in the mines! And you refuse to see it."

"Let me go, David. You've taken the child—"

"Damned right!"

"I'll never forgive you for what you're doing now."

"What betrayal do I choose never to forgive you for?" he demanded. He was shaking. Shaking even as he held her, his eyes glittering a liquid green torment. The warmth suddenly surrounding her was terrifying. She wanted to fight him. She leaned against him instead. "David, for
the
love of God! Can you honestly believe that I'd have ever allowed Danny to be with the Andersons if I had known?" she whispered. "David, you can't begin to imagine how hurt I was! I believed that my child, our child was dead. David..."

He was angry still; she knew that he was angry. But his fingers were suddenly moving in her hair.

"Shawna..."

She was in pain, she thought. Angry, hurt. And so tense that...

She wanted him. The passion of her anger seemed to be filling her blood, her limbs, her being. She gripped her fingers into his arms, trying to shake him, trying to make him listen to her, believe her.

"You have to understand!" she whispered with vehemence.

"Shawna!" he warned, but her force against him had upset them both. They fell back upon the softness of her tower bed and she told him, "You are insufferable!"

"Aye," he queried.

"You need to let me go!"

"Aye!" he agreed.

His mouth fused with hers. He kissed her with a wild, emotional passion. His hands were everywhere as his mouth pinned hers. She dragged her fingers through his hair, raked his shoulders. Dimly, she was aware of a rending of fabric. Her purple riding habit was coming open in tatters. The ribbons of chemise and corset were torn. His mouth was against her bare flesh, and somehow, the blaze of fire between them that so awakened her body seemed to ease her soul. The play of his mouth against her breast sent a sudden spiral of lightning shafting through her, and she gasped, suddenly still, then suddenly trembling. Again, her fingers were in his hair. Her body arched and writhed to his. She felt him freeing himself from his trousers, felt the probe of his sex, and clung to him. Wanting him. Wanting him so badly.

Such passion burned like the great fire that had rendered the stables black ash and rubble, burnt with a heat that could be sustained just so long. Wild, urgent, desperate, furious, it rose like a whipping wind, a storm surge.

Then was spent.

David's body strained like a bow, climaxed within her again and again, like waves against the shore. She dug her nails into his back, arching to each great thrust, then shuddering downward as the sweetness of satiation spilled atop her.

He fell to her side.

Shawna lay spent, her sense of bewilderment with herself strong. He had taken her child. And she wanted him still. Wanted to be held by him.

What were they doing to one another?

She wanted to curl away from him then as well. She wanted to tell him that she hated him, except she knew that she didn't really hate him, she hated the fact that she could no longer deny that someone she had loved and trusted all her life wanted her dead.

"Shawna?"

"I want you to leave me alone!" she whispered.

David was quiet a moment. Then, he said, "Aye," and he pushed away, adjusting his clothing. "I'll leave you be, my lady, but don't play games. You're not so furious with me as you want to be. You can't bear to see the truth, and I have forced you to do so."

"Danny!" she whispered.

He leaned over her, touching her shoulder. "Shawna, the lad is safe and that is what is important! Now I warn you, m'lady, don't leave this room! Your kin seek to kill you, and I'm afraid that I cannot let you die."

She rose as he walked away from her. "How can you! How dare you! You tell me that my child is returned, then take him from me. How dare you do this to me, then warn me—"

"I dare what I do, my lady, because five years ago I fell into your arms—and awoke a dead man. I dare, because I have discovered that in all those years, I had a child. And that child was cast to the wolves."

"Damn you, you've got to believe me—"

"Shawna!" he said softly. "It's very difficult to believe what you never tried to tell me."

"David, you can't just lock me in here. I have to know what is happening for myself!" she cried. "I have to try—"

"You will stay here. I intend to find out just who is trying to kill us both!"

He turned from her and started for the door. She raced after him. "David, you can't just leave this way—"

"Indeed, I can."

And—as David Douglas, laird of Castle Rock—he departed the room. As the door slammed, Shawna jumped, and stared at it for a long moment, shivering.

She dragged the knit bedcover from the bed and swept it around her half-clad shoulders, then hurried back to the door, throwing it open.

David was gone.

But she hadn't been left unattended. James McGregor sat whittling in a chair at the doorway.

"How..." she began.

"Lady MacGinnis," he said, offering her his strange gamin grin. "Laird Douglas is gone, but y'may rest in peace if y'so desire."

"Rest in peace... they write that on gravestones!" she told him.

He reddened. "Begging your pardon, my lady. What I meant was that I'd guard y'with me life."

"David has gone?"

"Aye, and ye'll not stop him this night, Lady. Trust me. I know him well."

"You'll protect me—and you'll not let me leave this room as well, I imagine?"

"M'lady, you do not want to leave your room. Evil is most assuredly afoot."

Indeed, she was a prisoner. David's prisoner. She nodded to the little man, stepped back in the room, and allowed the bedcover to fall from her shoulders. She ripped away what remained of her ruined clothing. For long moments she stood, shivering. Tears dripped down her cheeks, and she allowed herself the luxury of sobbing like a child.

But the tears only shook her so long, and she realized that she was standing naked in her bedroom, shaking. She donned a nightgown and a laced and ribboned robe, then went back to the hallway where James McGregor remained.

"Come in," she told him. "Come tell me just how well you know Laird Douglas. And if you know," she whispered, "for the love of God, please tell me where he's had Danny taken."

* * *

Sabrina felt as if she were on fire.

Life was not fair in any way, shape, or form.

She had just come from a tomb, for God's sake. She deserved some reprieve. She needed peace and quiet, healing time. She needed to elude Sloan, but now, Shawna and David—having tossed Sabrina's world into chaos!—had gone to fight their own battle, and Skylar and Hawk had deserted her as well.

The others had just left. Sabrina stared at the closed door, painfully aware that Sloan was behind her.

"How can you be here?" she whispered, leaning her forehead against the closed door.

He didn't reply to the question. "Sabrina, get back into bed before you fall down, will you. Please?" he added.

She didn't move. She should have. She felt his hands upon her shoulders. His grip seemed as hard as steel; there was no way to escape it.

Just as there had been no way to escape Sloan at the inn when she had inadvertently discovered his room while trying to hide from her stepfather, just as there had been no way out of playing the role that was to doom her to him tonight. It was all laughable, really. Upon just which occasion—out of two!—had they managed to bring about her condition—the first time when she 'd been so afraid, realizing far too late that she should have just told him the truth?

Or the second time, the following morning, when she had awakened, seduced? In no pain whatsoever, other than that of all but dying of humiliation?

"I'm all right."

"Indeed?" he queried, his voice husky at her earlobe. "It appears that you are trying to claw your way out of this room. The door opens freely enough, but there is really nowhere for you to go."

He suddenly swept her up into his arms.

"I can walk!" she cried in alarm, meeting his fathomless, dark mahogany gaze.

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