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Authors: Virginia Henley

BOOK: Tempted
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“It’s no’ a tavern, it’s a brothel.” He chuckled

She accepted a tankard of ale, and they stood at the taffrail watching as darkness descended and the ship’s lanterns were lit all across the harbor. “Where were you going when the English ship attacked you?” she asked.

“We were returning from France.”

“Oh David, you’re so lucky to go to all these places! I wish I’d been a son instead of a daughter! Show me the things you brought back.”

He took her below to show her the rich furnishings they’d brought back to sell. There was a great demand for French mirrors, which were fast replacing the old keeking glasses. There were padded silk screens, display cabinets, graceful boudoir chairs, footstools, and writing desks.

“Oh, this little laptop desk is so cunning, I must have it. It’s a perfect gift for an old gentleman I know.”

Davie laughed. “If ye know any gentlemen, I’ll swallow my sword without gaggin’ Take it—I don’t suppose father will mind. Belonged to the mistress of a French
duc.
Wrote all her
billets-doux
in bed, and it’s more cunnin’ than ye
realize. Here, feel the fancy fretwork around the edge of the drawer and press.”

Tina placed her fingers where he showed her. “Oh, a secret drawer within a drawer. How fascinating!” When she tired of the furniture, she said, “You didn’t go to France without bringing back perfume. Father will never miss one bottle.”

David said dryly, “No, but he’ll miss half a dozen. I’ve already pinched five.”

“Oh, surely you don’t need French perfume to impress the lassies! Tell them how you sank an English galleon, and you’ll be the talk of every tavern along the quay.”

“No fear of that. All the talk is o’ the darin’ and dangerous Lord Vengeance.”

“Lord Vengeance?” Tina asked, intrigued by the sobriquet.

“Dinna tell me ye haven’t heard o’ the valiant Lord Vengeance. The raids he’s mounted in retaliation ha’ almost impoverished the English borders. He strikes by land an’ by sea—both coasts on the same night wi’ his phantom ships.”

“That’s impossible!” Tina declared.

“Nothing is impossible fer the valiant Lord Vengeance, it seems,” said David enviously. “He’s fast becomin’ a legend. He dinna just sink English vessels, he boards them and gallantly spares the crew by leavin’ them on some remote shore.”

“Who is he?” Tina asked.

“Ah, therein lies the mystery. One day rumor has it that it’s the admiral himself. Next day, it’s the king’s cousin, the Earl o’ Lennox. The bettin’ is rife, an’ the odds-on favorite at the moment is Bothwell wreakin’ revenge.”

Tina’s hand flew to her mouth. “Black Ram Douglas,” she whispered.

“What about him?” Davie asked.

“Lord Vengeance is Black Ram Douglas! He changed the name of the
Valentina
to the
Revenge!”

“Don’t let yer imagination carry ye away, Firebrand.”

“No, Davie, I’m serious. He’s brought six English vessels he captured to sell here in Ayr.”

David masked his thoughts. Then he began to gently ridicule her. “This Lord Vengeance risks his neck tae do good deeds. He’s someone with a great sense of social justice who gives tae the poor an’ rights the wrongs done them. It’s someone valiant and kind and soft-hearted who puts others afore himself. Does that sound like Douglas?”

“No.” She laughed. “Lord Vengeance would give his ships to the king for the protection of Scotland—he wouldn’t sell them to line his pockets.”

Rob Kennedy, in a smart new French-cut doublet, came up on deck. “Well, lass, I’m off. I’ll join ye fer breakfast afore Douglas steals ye away again.”

“Good night, Father.”

“I’m off too,” David said with a wink. “I’ve business of ma ain needs attention.”

Valentina stood at the taffrail for a long time after the two Kennedys departed. The more she thought of Ram Douglas, the more she became convinced that he could be Lord Vengeance. She wished she’d kept her mouth shut in front of Davie. If it was true, it was incriminating information.

When Tina awoke, she was swept with a wave of nausea. She groaned. “I swear, rocking at anchor all night is ten times worse than riding out a storm.” She struggled into her clothes and joined her father. She watched him eat a hearty breakfast, her face as pale as his porridge. She denied to herself that she might be with child, and yet an inner voice whispered, it had been ages since she’s had her woman’s courses.

“Ye know, lass, there are some people who are smart, an’ some people who are smarter. Ram Douglas knows the secret of makin’ gold. The king should give up his alchemy experiments of heatin’ quicksilver tae produce gold, an’ hire Ram Douglas tae do the job fer him.”

Tina did not want her father to know she was suffering nausea, so she concentrated on the conversation. “In other words, he sold you a ship?”

“Two of ‘em,” he confirmed. “Arran bought two fer the navy, an’ the others went tae O’Malley, an Irish shipping magnate who was in port frae Innisfana.” He looked at her keenly as she sipped some watered wine. “Douglas seems right fond o’ ye, lass. Says he’s takin’ ye tae Glasgow fer a new wardrobe afore he takes ye tae court in Edinburgh.” He hesitated, then asked the question that had been plaguing him ever since the hand-fasting. “Is there any kindness at all in yer heart fer him?”

Her golden eyes sought her father’s and held them as she said very distinctly, “I shall hate him forever.” Her words gave him only a momentary pang of guilt. He felt he had done the right thing by giving her to a man as strong and powerful as Douglas. These were disquieting times for Scotland, and he felt in his bones there was worse to come.

When she went back aboard the
Antigone
, Tina went straight to her cabin, crawled into a bunk, and stayed there until they sailed into the Port of Glasgow. She awoke amazingly refreshed, and all signs of nausea had disappeared as if they had been figments of her imagination. By the time she dressed and went up on deck, the horses had been taken off the ship and her baggage was being loaded onto a wagon. Glasgow’s quayside was on the River Clyde, which was broad and crystal clear.

Ramsay, who had been watching for her, escorted her from the ship. “Are ye rested? Ye looked a little pale when ye came aboard this morning.”

“An empty wardrobe plays havoc with my constitution,” she said innocently.

He raised an amused eyebrow in the direction of her mountain of luggage. “Little vixen! Yer father told ye how much money I made last night.”

“He did, my Lord Douglas, and I seem to dimly recollect your promise to keep me in barbaric splendor.”

He laughed, his face a startling contrast from the harsh, grim expression he usually wore. “Angus has a townhouse in Garrowhill. Tomorrow I’ll take ye shopping along the Great Western Road.”

“I may have anything I desire?” she pressed.

“Aye, anything,” he promised.

Angus’s townhouse turned out to be a magnificent fifteenth-century mansion. For the first time Valentina began to think of the vast wealth and power attached to the name of Douglas. The house boasted frescoed ceilings, an elegant oval staircase, and salons crammed with art treasures and paintings from around the world.

Ram bade Ada take one bag only from the baggage cart and take it to the master bedchamber. He summoned Angus’s majordomo and told him to plenish two chambers in another wing for Tina’s servingwomen. He wanted her to himself tonight.

When Tina entered the master bedchamber, she was pleasantly surprised. It was easily twice the size of any chamber she’d ever seen. Its walls were covered by the palest green watered silk, and its ceiling was painted with scenes from Greek mythology. Its windows were really doors made from small panes of glass. These doors opened onto a small stone balcony with steps that led down to a private walled garden. At the moment it was ablaze with chrysanthemums, Michaelmas daisies, tall hollyhocks, and late-blooming roses. There was a small fountain with a sundial, and a large lime tree that held a swing.

The chamber had the luxury of a carved mantel and fireplace, but they would need no fire on this warm autumn night. The townhouse was the antithesis of a drafty castle. It had a room just for bathing, with water brought in by pipes.

Tonight they had dinner in the formal dining room. Tina found it a unique experience to sit at the opposite end of the polished refectory table and be waited on by two footmen in livery who anticipated their every need. Ram was in
a teasing mood, and he played an outrageous game of openly discussing what they would do after dinner He used polite euphemisms and wicked allusions in front of the footmen, who kept perfectly straight faces, but Tina knew full well that only halfwits would not have guessed what Ram meant by “the tall gentleman belowstairs” who had an insatiable desire to visit the perfumed garden again and again until every flower and bud was plucked.

Ram threw down his napkin and arose from the table. “My compliments tae the chef,” he said, nodding to one of the footmen Then he took Tina’s hand and led her from the room, whispering, “Christ, I didn’t know what I was eating—all I could taste was ye.”

Upstairs in the lovely master bedchamber, he did not fall upon her to undress her but held himself in check. He invited her to play a game of chess and regaled her with tales of his youth when he had visited some of the far-flung castles of the Highlands He was describing Castle Huntly that belonged to the Gordons “It stands seven stories tall, made from thick red sandstone. From the distance it’s like a castle from a fairy tale, all turrets, gables, and parapets It overlooks the green hills of Fife. Ye enter through a forecourt on the third level.”

He watched her moves carefully. They were clever without being devious. He was quite impressed with her for the simple reason she was the first woman he’d known who didn’t cheat

Tina said, “Aren’t the Gordons supposed to be quite eccentric?”

“Ye are being kind Mad as hatters is more like it. A staggering number of them are illegitimate Lady Gordon once had her eye on me for her daughter Louisa She told me not to fret myself about the streak of insanity, for there wasn’t a drop of Gordon blood in her!”

Tina laughed. “You’re making it up to distract me! Check,” she said, thinking she had him trapped

He moved his bishop. “Checkmate,” he murmured softly.

“Damnation!” she swore.

“Why don’t ye put on one of those negligées Ada designed especially tae drive a man tae commit depravities?”

“Would it throw you off your game?”

“Not the game I have in mind.”

When she opened the bag Ada had brought upstairs, she found the nightgown inside was black lace. As her hands closed over the sensual garment, she knew it would have the power to distract him. His eyes never left her as she slowly undressed, drawing it out to deliberately tease and tempt him. She was confident in the power of her beauty and her body, arching her back, tossing her hair, pouting her lips, and stroking her breasts. Before she donned the black lace, she touched perfume to her nipples, navel, and pubis, then let the peekaboo lace fall to her feet, covering her body, yet not covering it.

“Ye play the mistress very well, chérie. Have ye been at the game long?” he teased.

“Oui
All my lovers have been well endowed.”

His lips twitched. “Ye like big cocks?”

“Big cocks are not enough. I need big brains too.”

They played another game of chess that Tina won because he didn’t even pretend to concentrate. She slipped his queen down inside the lace between her breasts and gloated over his defeat. “I’m going to keep your queen so that whenever you become insufferable, I’ll pull it out and taunt you!” She pulled it from between her breasts and slipped it back again.

He moved toward her with deliberate intent. “I’ll pull it out and taunt ye.”

“Oh yes, please!” she giggled. The laughter left her face as he began to disrobe. Her golden eyes changed to smoky amber with the intensity of the passion he aroused in her. His strong hands slipped the straps of her nightrail from her shoulders, and it slid down her body to make a black
pool at her feet. The queen rolled beneath the great bed, forgotten by both.

He kissed her for a full hour, then played with her hair and her body for another hour before he made love to her He enjoyed the foreplay as much as she—more perhaps, for she was writhing in spread-eagled abandon before he completed penetration. He whispered, “Christ, yer so hot fer me, ye make a man feel like a man more than any woman I’ve ever known! When I see ye flushed wi’ passion, excitement stabs through me like great shards of glass.”

She gasped as the plunging heat of his blade made its relentless demands upon her to yield up everything to him. The throbbing fullness inside her set her whole body a-shiver. She loved his animal maleness. Everything about him was hard as iron. His arms, his chest, his legs, even his thighs were corded with rigid saddle muscles. When Ram’s shudder came, it was so intense it entered her and she shuddered also, becoming one with him

He loved the quiet time after he’d made love to her. He always felt so completely satisfied. He felt whole She restored his vigor. He was filled with life and love. Finally he rolled from her but kept her bound to his side with one possessive arm. The ceiling above the bed depicted Aphrodite, Greek goddess of love and beauty, naked, rising from the sea, her golden-red hair falling to her hips, one hand cupped beneath a delicately voluptuous breast. “Ye are more beautiful than Aphrodite,” he mused.

“Is that who she is?” murmured Tina.

He chuckled. “Ye are a decidedly uneducated wench. Aphrodite, goddess of love and beauty, is fabled tae have risen from the sea near the island of Cyprus. Her husband was Hephaestus, and she was always attended by the Graces and by Eros, sometimes called Cupid The paintings always show doves.”

“Mmm, who is that devil-eyed dark creature with the big you-know-what?”

“That is Mars. She had a notorious intrigue with him.”

“How can she possibly look so much like me?” she puzzled.

Ram chuckled. “Angus had it painted. Janet Kennedy probably posed fer the artist. Ye don’t think yer the first mistress tae lie in this bed wi’ her lover, do ye?”

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