The Highlander's Touch

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Authors: Karen Marie Moning

BOOK: The Highlander's Touch
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She opened the door and began to step in, when he suddenly spun her around into his arms.

Without a word, he brutally closed his mouth over hers.

Too shocked to resist, Lisa stood motionless, her lips parting at the insistence of his tongue. He was angry, she could feel it in the bruising crush of his lips, and it fed her own anger.

Then it occurred to her that kissing was quite a useful and fascinating way to express anger, so she worked diligently at putting every bit of her irritation and displeasure into her response. She wrapped her arms around him and kissed him back so uninhibitedly that he stiffened abruptly, stepped back, and gazed at her with a startled expression.

Briefly, he looked pleased, then his eyes narrowed swiftly. “I doona like you, and I will
not
tolerate you complicating my life.”

“Ditto,” she clipped through swollen lips.

“Then we understand each other,” he said.

“Mm-hmm,” she said. “Perfectly.”

“Good.”

They stared at each other.

“Doona forget who’s in control in this castle, lass,” he snarled before stalking off down the hallway.

If that was how he asserted his control, she might just have to challenge his authority more often.

Dell Books by Karen Marie Moning

Kiss of the Highlander
Beyond the Highland Mist
To Tame a Highland Warrior
The Highlander’s Touch
The Dark Highlander
The Immortal Highlander

For the love of it

I am that merry wanderer of the night
I jest to Oberon and make him smile …


A Midsummer Night’s Dream
/Shakespeare

H
IGHLANDS OF
S
COTLAND
C
ASTLE
B
RODIE
—1308

A
DAM
B
LACK MATERIALIZED IN THE
G
REATHALL
.

Silently, he observed the towering warrior who paced before the fire.

Circenn Brodie, laird and thane of Brodie, exuded the magnetism of a man born not merely to exist in his world, but to conquer it.
Power has never been so seductive
, Adam thought,
except, perhaps, in me
.

The object of his study turned from the fire, unruffled by Adam’s silent presence.

“What do
you
want?” Circenn said.

Adam was not surprised by his tone. He’d learned long ago not to expect civility from this particular Highland laird. Adam Black, the deadly jester in the Fairy Queen’s court, was an irritant Circenn suffered unwillingly. Kicking a chair close to the fire, Adam lounged in it backward, resting his arms over the slatted back. “Is that any way to greet me after months of absence?”

“You know I despise it when you appear without warning.
And as to your absence, I had been savoring my good fortune.” Circenn turned back toward the fire.

“You would miss me if I were gone for long,” Adam assured him, studying his profile.
Sinful that he looks such a powerful beast, yet comports himself with such decorum
, Adam thought. If Circenn Brodie was going to look like a savage Pict warrior, then by Dagda he should act like one.

“The same way I might miss a hole in my shield, a warthog in my bed, or a fire in my stables,” Circenn said. “Turn around in your chair and sit like a proper person.”

“Ah, but I am neither proper nor a person, so you needn’t expect me to conform to your requirements. I shudder to think what you would do without all your rules for a ‘normal’ existence, Circenn.” When Circenn stiffened, Adam grinned and extended a graceful hand to a maid who’d been lingering in the shadows at the perimeter of the Greathall. He tossed his head, casting silky dark hair over his shoulder. “Come.”

The maid approached, her gaze darting between Circenn and Adam, as if uncertain which man posed the greater threat. Or which the greater lure.

“May I serve milords?” she said breathlessly.

“Nay, Gillendria,” Circenn dismissed her. “Off to bed with you. It is well past the goblin’s hour”—he shot a dark look at Adam—“and my guest has no needs I care to see filled.”

“Aye, Gillendria,” Adam purred. “There are many ways you may serve me this night. I will take pleasure in teaching you all of them. Off to your quarters while we men talk. I will join you there.”

The young maid’s eyes widened as she hastened to obey him.

“Leave my wenches alone” Circenn ordered.

“I don’t get them pregnant.” Adam flashed his most insolent grin.

“That is not my concern; it is the fact that they are all but witless once you have finished with them.”

“Witless? Who was witless tonight?”

Circenn tensed but said nothing.

“Where are the hallows, Circenn?” A glint of mischief kindled in Adam’s remote eyes.

Circenn turned his back fully to the fairy.

“You
did
protect them for us, did you not?” Adam asked. “Don’t tell me you
lost
them?” he chided when Circenn failed to reply.

Circenn turned back to face him, legs wide, head cocked, arms folded; his usual position when quietly furious. “Why do you waste my time asking me questions when you already know the answers?”

Adam shrugged elegantly. “Because the droppers at the eaves will be unable to follow this splendid saga if we do not speak of it aloud.”

“No one eavesdrops in my castle.”

“I forgot,” Adam purred, “no one misbehaves at Castle Brodie. Ever-spotless, ever-disciplined, perfect Castle Brodie. You bore me, Circenn. This paragon of restraint you pretend to be is a waste of the fine breeding that forged you.”

“Let us have done with this conversation, shall we?”

Adam folded his arms across the back of the chair. “All right. What happened tonight? Templars were to meet you at Ballyhock. They were to entrust the hallows to your care. I heard they were ambushed.”

“You heard correctly,” Circenn replied evenly.

“Do you understand how important it is that the Templars be given sanctuary in Scotland, now that they’ve been disbanded?”

“Of course I understand,” Circenn growled.

“And how imperative it is that the hallows do not fall into the wrong hands?”

Circenn waved Adam’s question away with an impatient hand. “The four hallows have been secured. The moment we suspected the Templars were going to come under siege, the spear, the cauldron, the sword, and the stone were rushed back into Scotland, despite the war going on. Better they rest in a country torn than with the persecuted Templars, whose Order is being ripped asunder. The hallows are safe—”

“Except for the flask, Circenn,” Adam said. “What of it? Where is it?”

“The flask is not a hallow,” Circenn prevaricated.

“I know that,” Adam said dryly. “But the flask is a sacred relic of our race, and we could all be in danger should it fall into the wrong hands. I repeat, where is the flask?”

Circenn plunged a hand into his hair, pushing it back from his face. Adam was struck by the sensual majesty of the man. Silky black hair was gripped between elegant fingers, revealing a face composed of strong planes, a chiseled jaw, and dark brows. He had the olive-toned skin, the intense eyes, and the aggressive, dominant temperament of his Brude ancestors.

“I doona know,” Circenn finally said.

“You doona know?” Adam mimicked his brogue, aware that such an admission must have tasted foul on Circenn Brodie’s tongue. Nothing was ever out of the laird of Brodie’s control. Rules and more rules governed everything and everyone in Circenn’s world. “A flask containing
a sacred elixir, created by my race, disappears from your very grasp and you
doona know
where it is?”

“The situation is not so dire, Adam. It is not permanently lost. Think of it as … temporarily displaced, and soon to be regained.”

Adam arched a brow. “You split hairs with a battle-ax. Skillful prevarication is a woman’s art, Brodie. What happened?”

“Ian was carrying the chest that holds the flask. When the attack came, I was on the south side of the bridge waiting for Ian to cross over from the north. He took a blow to the head and was knocked off the bridge, into the river below. The chest was whisked away by the current—”

“And you say that is not so bad? Anyone could have it now. Would you like to see the English king get his hands on that flask? Do you understand the danger it presents?”

“Of course I do. It will not come to that, Adam,” Circenn said. “I laid a geas upon the flask. It will not fall into another’s hands, because the moment it is discovered it will be returned to me.”

“A geas?” Adam snorted. “Puny magic. A proper fairy would have simply spelled it back out of the river.”

“I am not fae. I am Brude-Scot and proud of it. Count yourself fortunate I cursed it at all. You know I have no fondness for the druid ways. Curses are unpredictable.”

“What clever invocation did you choose, Circenn?” Adam asked silkily. “You
did
choose your words well, did you not?”

“Of course I did. Think you I have learned nothing from past mistakes? The moment the chest is opened and the flask is touched by a human hand it will be returned to me. I cursed it very specifically.”

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