Authors: Rowan Keats
As she approached, he stood and poured her an ale.
“What did you determine?” she asked, accepting the cup he offered.
“The situation is complicated,” he said.
“How so?”
“Sit,” he said, tapping the back of a wooden chair.
She sat. His frown had knotted her belly. He looked far too serious. “Is it not a matter of sneaking into the camp and stealing her away?”
“Nay,” he said, shaking his head. “Sir Giric is claiming Marsailli is his wife.”
“That’s preposterous! My sister would never agree to wed that wretch.” And Giric despised Scots. He’d never marry one. Of that, Caitrina was certain. “It’s a lie.”
Bran nodded. “I’ve no doubt of that. The problem is, your sister will no speak against him. Indeed, she won’t say aught at all.” He paused. “Unfortunately, this matter is no longer a quiet affair, to be handled by you and me. I was forced to involve the constable.”
Her heart sank. If the queen caught wind of her involvement, all her efforts to redeem her family’s honor and restore their place in society would be for naught. “Why?”
“When I arrived at the camp, Giric was attempting to force himself on Marsailli.”
Caitrina went cold all over. “Dear god.”
“My entrance was timely,” he said hastily. “She is safe, for now.”
Her hand flattened against her chest, a rather pointless attempt to calm her fluttering heart. “Thank
heaven.” Her gaze lifted to his. “Or rather, thank
you
. If you’d been even a few minutes later—”
“She is safe,” he repeated, with a faint smile. “Dougal has placed two men in Giric’s camp, tasked with ensuring her safety until we resolve the matter of his claim.”
“Does Dougal know Marsailli is my sister?”
“Nay, Giric said nothing of her relation to you. He claims she is the daughter of a Lowland cottar and that she ran away with him.”
A convenient lie. For both of them. “What shall we do now?”
“We need Marsailli to speak. To dismiss Giric’s claim.”
Caitrina briefly closed her eyes, imagining her sister’s sweet disposition and the effect Giric’s attack would have had. “I’m sure she’s too frightened to speak. She believes he will kill her if she dares to naysay him.”
“Aye.”
Caitrina grabbed Bran’s hand. His warm, strong, reassuring hand. It didn’t bear imagining what would have transpired had he not aided her. What would have happened to Marsailli. “I must meet with her, convince her to utter the truth. If she tells Dougal she’s not Giric’s wife, she’ll be free.”
He gently squeezed her fingers. “It won’t be that easy, lass. Giric will no allow you to walk into his camp and take Marsailli back, no without a fight. If he loses his hold over you, he fails King Edward. From what I’ve heard, incurring the wrath of Longshanks is a sure
way to see your head roll. Giric will do everything in his power to prevent that.”
Caitrina swallowed. The situation had swiftly spun out of control, much faster than she could have imagined. She had hoped to steal Marsailli quietly from the camp and then renegotiate her terms with Giric. But now disaster loomed on all fronts. If she left her sister in Giric’s hands, Marsailli faced rape. If she set her free, Giric would retaliate and a bloody battle would ensue. Men would die. And even if Dougal’s men triumphed in said battle, there was a very good chance the Bear would name Caitrina as an accomplice in his crimes.
Dear lord. What was she to do?
She offered Bran a teary smile. “Then what?”
He cupped her chin and wiped her tears away with his thumb. “Let me dwell on it. Marsailli is safe for now. I vow that I will find some way to set her free. Just give me time.”
She leaned into his hand. Now would be a fine moment to tell him about the Guardians, but losing Bran would destroy her. When her maither had passed, the burden of making a life for her and Marsailli had fallen upon her shoulders. And that burden was overwhelming now. “You have my faith, and more.”
The gillies had all bedded down for the night, and the great hall was a dark haven save for one torch bracketed on the wall next to the door and another next to the stairs. The banked fire in the hearth gave off only the faintest orange glow, and Caitrina took advantage of the soft lighting. She slid to the edge of her seat, moving forward until their knees touched.
Layers of cloth separated them, but that didn’t stop
hot tingles from running up her legs to her most private parts. By god. Even his knees felt strong and sure. “You are a much better man than you would have the world believe,” she said quietly, brushing an errant lock of his hair away from his face so she could better gaze upon his firm cheekbones and deep brown eyes. He had remarkably long eyelashes for a man. “In the space of a day, you’ve twice saved me from harm and once thwarted an attack on my sister.”
He stayed the movements of her hand with his.
“Lass,” he said, his voice a low rumble. “I’m not the man you think me to be.”
The warmth of his hand on hers was quite enjoyable, but she found herself wanting more. Much more. Starting with another kiss. Strangely, the knowledge that someone in the great hall might wake up and notice only added intensity to her desire. “So it wasn’t you who did those things?”
“My sins far outweigh what few good deeds I’ve done.”
Caitrina leaned in, breathing deep of his male scent—a heady mix of pine and leather and that spice that was uniquely Bran. “I’m well aware of your sins. I know, for example, that they include kissing unwed ladies in dark places.” She pressed her lips against the corner of his mouth, tasting the slight saltiness of his skin and the rasp of his growing beard.
He grabbed her arms and pushed her away.
“Cease,” he said gruffly. “That kiss was an error in judgment. One I do not intend to repeat.”
“Why not?” she asked. “It was quite delightful.”
“Because sinful men don’t stop at kisses.”
Caitrina’s pulse quickened. “Perhaps I don’t want you to stop.”
“Your future husband surely does.”
She sat back, smiling ruefully. “That future husband does not exist. No man is interested in wedding the daughter of a man outlawed for murder, especially one with no lands or title to her name.”
Bran arched an eyebrow. “Your father murdered a man?”
“Not just any man,” she said, with a short laugh. All she had of her father were a few hazy memories, but her chest still ached when she spoke of him. “A favorite cousin of King Edward. Inside a church, no less. My papa managed to enrage the crown and the pope with one single act of revenge.” There’d been no safe place for him then. Forced to abandon his family, he’d wandered the world until the day he died. But that was not a tale for tonight. She tilted her head and smiled at him. “So, there is no husband waiting for me to arrive chaste and pure at the church door.”
“Your reputation cannot be as poor as you say,” he disputed, rising to his feet and walking around to the back of his chair. “The queen appointed you lady-in-waiting.”
She shrugged. “She is my cousin, and she took pity on me.”
“Surely she has the power to make a marriage for you?”
“Had King Alexander lived,” she said, “she might have arranged a union. Now? Her only thought is for her bairn.” She got to her feet and followed him. His proximity to the chair prevented her from getting too
close, so she sidled up to his arm. “Queen Yolande is content that I shall never wed. A husband and bairns of my own would distract me from my duties as lady of the nursery.”
He frowned.
Caitrina put a hand on him, relishing the rippling sinews beneath his linen sleeve. “I am honored to be appointed lady of the nursery, and in the queen’s court I will enjoy a full and purposeful life. But when it comes to bliss, I am master of my own fate. I will make it where and when I can. And I choose now, Bran. With you.”
* * *
Bran stared at the dainty hand on his sleeve. Pale and lovely, the nails neatly trimmed and smooth. The hand of a lady. “Why me? Why now?”
Her fingers clenched briefly. “Does it matter?”
Surprisingly, it did. He rarely denied himself a moment of pleasure, but this lass was unlike any lass he’d ever tupped before. In two event-filled days, she’d seduced him with a dizzying blend of courage and fear, strength and vulnerability, confidence and hesitation. Every sweetly feminine feature—her nose, her lips, her glorious hair—teased him mercilessly. He wanted her so surely, he could not sit next to her or endure the touch of her hand on his skin without envisioning her beneath him, moaning in ecstasy. And, damn his soul, he needed to know if she felt even a mote of the same desire.
“Aye, it matters.”
A smile came and went on her face. It was gone so swiftly it barely had time to light up her eyes. “Well,
then. I suppose a moment like this is best served by honesty.” She chewed her delicious bottom lip. “Your fine looks are a consideration, of course. My eyes are drawn to you the instant you enter a room.”
A problem he shared.
“But I’ve met many a braw fellow in service to the queen and never yet been tempted to cast away the moorings of my maidenhead. So it’s clearly more than that. That smile of yours plays a part. You know the one—the devilish curve of your lips that is half wry humor and half suggestion of wickedly sensual secrets. When you turn it upon me, I cannot help but wonder what those secrets might be. I find you very distracting.”
Bran blinked. The lady was far more observant than he gave her credit for. His smile was a tool he wielded every day in the streets of Edinburgh. Many a rich lass had lost coins from her purse while dazzled by his suggestive grin.
“But again,” she said. “Too simple a reason. The truth lies deeper.” Her gaze met his. “It lies inside the heart of the man I
know
you to be—the man I’m not certain you see when you look in the still waters of the pond.” She slid her hand across his chest, flattened her palm right over his heart. “You call yourself a despicable thief, and I do not doubt that you are, to some measure. But the man I wish to tup is the honorable fellow who saved my sister from a fate worse than death. Who knocked a young lad on the head rather than run him through. Who urged me to run away when I willingly offered him my body.”
His heart thumped like a drum. What honor he
possessed was threadbare at the moment. Every hot pulse through his body was telling him to snatch her up and carry her off to his room. Instead, he gripped the top rail of the chair with both hands and managed one last burst of reason.
“I’m also the man who betrayed the faith of a valued friend by stealing a family jewel. The man who slit the throat of drunken sot in a dark Edinburgh wynd. The man who left his own brother to rot in a prison cell, making no attempt to save him.”
Her smile turned sad. “All tales that I hope you’ll share the truth of one day.”
He stared at her, unable to fathom her belief in him.
She pressed her lips to the corner of his mouth, soft and sweet. “Perhaps I trust too easily. I’ve certainly been disappointed by the actions of others in the past. But you’ve had numerous opportunities to take advantage and have taken none.”
“I kissed you in the cellars,” he pointed out.
“I recall that,” she said, laughing lightly in his ear. Stirring the hairs at his temple and sending a wave of molten need rushing to his loins. “Hardly what I would label as taking advantage, however. It was quite delightful, but far too short.”
It
had
been short. By necessity. He’d been dangerously close to losing control—but nowhere near as close as he was this moment. The lass had no idea how desperate his desire was, but if he turned to face her, she’d know in an instant.
Her hot, wet lips found his earlobe, suckling. “Would you kiss me again?”
Dear god. Only a saint would be able to resist such a plea. And he was no saint.
Bran grabbed her shoulders and hauled her against his body, relishing every soft curve and gentle mound that met his press. He claimed her mouth with a kiss that was half raw hunger, half frustration. She had driven him to the edge of reason—and beyond. All he knew was the fierce pound of blood through his body and an unrelenting need. A need that could be slaked only by Caitrina de Montfort.
He mashed his lips against hers, demanding everything she could give him.
And she gave. Willingly.
Her arms wrapped around his neck, holding him tight, inviting him to deepen the kiss. Which he did. With a sweep of his tongue, he parted her lips and drank of the nectar that was her mouth. She tasted like honey, faintly spiced with mead, and it was all too easy to imagine tasting another part of her. A low groan rumbled in his throat.
She stiffened in his arms, no doubt shocked by the intimacy, and he gentled his assault. She was a maiden, after all. And if she decided she wasn’t ready for more, then he would back away. Using every scrap of his willpower to withdraw, of course. He would need it.
But his intrepid young lass did not break off the kiss.
She thrust her fingers into his hair, angled her head to get even closer, and parried the invasion of his tongue with her own. Bran’s eyes closed. Sweet heaven. He was done for. His knees actually wobbled, which he could safely say had never happened before. All his life, he’d been the one to do the charming, the one who
beguiled. Now the boot was on the other foot. Caitrina made him feel like a wee lad receiving his first kiss. And lord, what a kiss. The mating of their mouths was spurring his desire into an insatiable hunger. With one hand on her back and the other splayed over the tender curve of her rump, he pulled her even closer, determined to claim her as surely as she was claiming him.
The press of her feminine body up and down the length of his was delightful. The short, quick rasps of her breath in his ear and the perfumed scent of her heated skin drove his excitement to a fevered level.
But none of it was satisfying. Every inch of his skin craved her touch. He wanted her naked and writhing beneath him. He wanted to bury himself deep inside her and show her every delight of the flesh. But those were impossible needs. Despite her pretty pleas, Caitrina was not a woman to be used lightly. And a few days was the best he could offer. There were people in Edinburgh depending on his return.